cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
git clone https://git.sinitax.com/sinitax/cachepc-linux
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psi.rst (6627B)


      1.. _psi:
      2
      3================================
      4PSI - Pressure Stall Information
      5================================
      6
      7:Date: April, 2018
      8:Author: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
      9
     10When CPU, memory or IO devices are contended, workloads experience
     11latency spikes, throughput losses, and run the risk of OOM kills.
     12
     13Without an accurate measure of such contention, users are forced to
     14either play it safe and under-utilize their hardware resources, or
     15roll the dice and frequently suffer the disruptions resulting from
     16excessive overcommit.
     17
     18The psi feature identifies and quantifies the disruptions caused by
     19such resource crunches and the time impact it has on complex workloads
     20or even entire systems.
     21
     22Having an accurate measure of productivity losses caused by resource
     23scarcity aids users in sizing workloads to hardware--or provisioning
     24hardware according to workload demand.
     25
     26As psi aggregates this information in realtime, systems can be managed
     27dynamically using techniques such as load shedding, migrating jobs to
     28other systems or data centers, or strategically pausing or killing low
     29priority or restartable batch jobs.
     30
     31This allows maximizing hardware utilization without sacrificing
     32workload health or risking major disruptions such as OOM kills.
     33
     34Pressure interface
     35==================
     36
     37Pressure information for each resource is exported through the
     38respective file in /proc/pressure/ -- cpu, memory, and io.
     39
     40The format is as such::
     41
     42	some avg10=0.00 avg60=0.00 avg300=0.00 total=0
     43	full avg10=0.00 avg60=0.00 avg300=0.00 total=0
     44
     45The "some" line indicates the share of time in which at least some
     46tasks are stalled on a given resource.
     47
     48The "full" line indicates the share of time in which all non-idle
     49tasks are stalled on a given resource simultaneously. In this state
     50actual CPU cycles are going to waste, and a workload that spends
     51extended time in this state is considered to be thrashing. This has
     52severe impact on performance, and it's useful to distinguish this
     53situation from a state where some tasks are stalled but the CPU is
     54still doing productive work. As such, time spent in this subset of the
     55stall state is tracked separately and exported in the "full" averages.
     56
     57CPU full is undefined at the system level, but has been reported
     58since 5.13, so it is set to zero for backward compatibility.
     59
     60The ratios (in %) are tracked as recent trends over ten, sixty, and
     61three hundred second windows, which gives insight into short term events
     62as well as medium and long term trends. The total absolute stall time
     63(in us) is tracked and exported as well, to allow detection of latency
     64spikes which wouldn't necessarily make a dent in the time averages,
     65or to average trends over custom time frames.
     66
     67Monitoring for pressure thresholds
     68==================================
     69
     70Users can register triggers and use poll() to be woken up when resource
     71pressure exceeds certain thresholds.
     72
     73A trigger describes the maximum cumulative stall time over a specific
     74time window, e.g. 100ms of total stall time within any 500ms window to
     75generate a wakeup event.
     76
     77To register a trigger user has to open psi interface file under
     78/proc/pressure/ representing the resource to be monitored and write the
     79desired threshold and time window. The open file descriptor should be
     80used to wait for trigger events using select(), poll() or epoll().
     81The following format is used::
     82
     83	<some|full> <stall amount in us> <time window in us>
     84
     85For example writing "some 150000 1000000" into /proc/pressure/memory
     86would add 150ms threshold for partial memory stall measured within
     871sec time window. Writing "full 50000 1000000" into /proc/pressure/io
     88would add 50ms threshold for full io stall measured within 1sec time window.
     89
     90Triggers can be set on more than one psi metric and more than one trigger
     91for the same psi metric can be specified. However for each trigger a separate
     92file descriptor is required to be able to poll it separately from others,
     93therefore for each trigger a separate open() syscall should be made even
     94when opening the same psi interface file. Write operations to a file descriptor
     95with an already existing psi trigger will fail with EBUSY.
     96
     97Monitors activate only when system enters stall state for the monitored
     98psi metric and deactivates upon exit from the stall state. While system is
     99in the stall state psi signal growth is monitored at a rate of 10 times per
    100tracking window.
    101
    102The kernel accepts window sizes ranging from 500ms to 10s, therefore min
    103monitoring update interval is 50ms and max is 1s. Min limit is set to
    104prevent overly frequent polling. Max limit is chosen as a high enough number
    105after which monitors are most likely not needed and psi averages can be used
    106instead.
    107
    108When activated, psi monitor stays active for at least the duration of one
    109tracking window to avoid repeated activations/deactivations when system is
    110bouncing in and out of the stall state.
    111
    112Notifications to the userspace are rate-limited to one per tracking window.
    113
    114The trigger will de-register when the file descriptor used to define the
    115trigger  is closed.
    116
    117Userspace monitor usage example
    118===============================
    119
    120::
    121
    122  #include <errno.h>
    123  #include <fcntl.h>
    124  #include <stdio.h>
    125  #include <poll.h>
    126  #include <string.h>
    127  #include <unistd.h>
    128
    129  /*
    130   * Monitor memory partial stall with 1s tracking window size
    131   * and 150ms threshold.
    132   */
    133  int main() {
    134	const char trig[] = "some 150000 1000000";
    135	struct pollfd fds;
    136	int n;
    137
    138	fds.fd = open("/proc/pressure/memory", O_RDWR | O_NONBLOCK);
    139	if (fds.fd < 0) {
    140		printf("/proc/pressure/memory open error: %s\n",
    141			strerror(errno));
    142		return 1;
    143	}
    144	fds.events = POLLPRI;
    145
    146	if (write(fds.fd, trig, strlen(trig) + 1) < 0) {
    147		printf("/proc/pressure/memory write error: %s\n",
    148			strerror(errno));
    149		return 1;
    150	}
    151
    152	printf("waiting for events...\n");
    153	while (1) {
    154		n = poll(&fds, 1, -1);
    155		if (n < 0) {
    156			printf("poll error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
    157			return 1;
    158		}
    159		if (fds.revents & POLLERR) {
    160			printf("got POLLERR, event source is gone\n");
    161			return 0;
    162		}
    163		if (fds.revents & POLLPRI) {
    164			printf("event triggered!\n");
    165		} else {
    166			printf("unknown event received: 0x%x\n", fds.revents);
    167			return 1;
    168		}
    169	}
    170
    171	return 0;
    172  }
    173
    174Cgroup2 interface
    175=================
    176
    177In a system with a CONFIG_CGROUP=y kernel and the cgroup2 filesystem
    178mounted, pressure stall information is also tracked for tasks grouped
    179into cgroups. Each subdirectory in the cgroupfs mountpoint contains
    180cpu.pressure, memory.pressure, and io.pressure files; the format is
    181the same as the /proc/pressure/ files.
    182
    183Per-cgroup psi monitors can be specified and used the same way as
    184system-wide ones.