diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/sched/ext_internal.h')
| -rw-r--r-- | kernel/sched/ext_internal.h | 114 |
1 files changed, 98 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/sched/ext_internal.h b/kernel/sched/ext_internal.h index 11ebb744d893..00b450597f3e 100644 --- a/kernel/sched/ext_internal.h +++ b/kernel/sched/ext_internal.h @@ -1035,26 +1035,108 @@ static const char *scx_enable_state_str[] = { }; /* - * sched_ext_entity->ops_state + * Task Ownership State Machine (sched_ext_entity->ops_state) * - * Used to track the task ownership between the SCX core and the BPF scheduler. - * State transitions look as follows: + * The sched_ext core uses this state machine to track task ownership + * between the SCX core and the BPF scheduler. This allows the BPF + * scheduler to dispatch tasks without strict ordering requirements, while + * the SCX core safely rejects invalid dispatches. * - * NONE -> QUEUEING -> QUEUED -> DISPATCHING - * ^ | | - * | v v - * \-------------------------------/ + * State Transitions * - * QUEUEING and DISPATCHING states can be waited upon. See wait_ops_state() call - * sites for explanations on the conditions being waited upon and why they are - * safe. Transitions out of them into NONE or QUEUED must store_release and the - * waiters should load_acquire. + * .------------> NONE (owned by SCX core) + * | | ^ + * | enqueue | | direct dispatch + * | v | + * | QUEUEING -------' + * | | + * | enqueue | + * | completes | + * | v + * | QUEUED (owned by BPF scheduler) + * | | + * | dispatch | + * | | + * | v + * | DISPATCHING + * | | + * | dispatch | + * | completes | + * `---------------' * - * Tracking scx_ops_state enables sched_ext core to reliably determine whether - * any given task can be dispatched by the BPF scheduler at all times and thus - * relaxes the requirements on the BPF scheduler. This allows the BPF scheduler - * to try to dispatch any task anytime regardless of its state as the SCX core - * can safely reject invalid dispatches. + * State Descriptions + * + * - %SCX_OPSS_NONE: + * Task is owned by the SCX core. It's either on a run queue, running, + * or being manipulated by the core scheduler. The BPF scheduler has no + * claim on this task. + * + * - %SCX_OPSS_QUEUEING: + * Transitional state while transferring a task from the SCX core to + * the BPF scheduler. The task's rq lock is held during this state. + * Since QUEUEING is both entered and exited under the rq lock, dequeue + * can never observe this state (it would be a BUG). When finishing a + * dispatch, if the task is still in %SCX_OPSS_QUEUEING the completion + * path busy-waits for it to leave this state (via wait_ops_state()) + * before retrying. + * + * - %SCX_OPSS_QUEUED: + * Task is owned by the BPF scheduler. It's on a DSQ (dispatch queue) + * and the BPF scheduler is responsible for dispatching it. A QSEQ + * (queue sequence number) is embedded in this state to detect + * dispatch/dequeue races: if a task is dequeued and re-enqueued, the + * QSEQ changes and any in-flight dispatch operations targeting the old + * QSEQ are safely ignored. + * + * - %SCX_OPSS_DISPATCHING: + * Transitional state while transferring a task from the BPF scheduler + * back to the SCX core. This state indicates the BPF scheduler has + * selected the task for execution. When dequeue needs to take the task + * off a DSQ and it is still in %SCX_OPSS_DISPATCHING, the dequeue path + * busy-waits for it to leave this state (via wait_ops_state()) before + * proceeding. Exits to %SCX_OPSS_NONE when dispatch completes. + * + * Memory Ordering + * + * Transitions out of %SCX_OPSS_QUEUEING and %SCX_OPSS_DISPATCHING into + * %SCX_OPSS_NONE or %SCX_OPSS_QUEUED must use atomic_long_set_release() + * and waiters must use atomic_long_read_acquire(). This ensures proper + * synchronization between concurrent operations. + * + * Cross-CPU Task Migration + * + * When moving a task in the %SCX_OPSS_DISPATCHING state, we can't simply + * grab the target CPU's rq lock because a concurrent dequeue might be + * waiting on %SCX_OPSS_DISPATCHING while holding the source rq lock + * (deadlock). + * + * The sched_ext core uses a "lock dancing" protocol coordinated by + * p->scx.holding_cpu. When moving a task to a different rq: + * + * 1. Verify task can be moved (CPU affinity, migration_disabled, etc.) + * 2. Set p->scx.holding_cpu to the current CPU + * 3. Set task state to %SCX_OPSS_NONE; dequeue waits while DISPATCHING + * is set, so clearing DISPATCHING first prevents the circular wait + * (safe to lock the rq we need) + * 4. Unlock the current CPU's rq + * 5. Lock src_rq (where the task currently lives) + * 6. Verify p->scx.holding_cpu == current CPU, if not, dequeue won the + * race (dequeue clears holding_cpu to -1 when it takes the task), in + * this case migration is aborted + * 7. If src_rq == dst_rq: clear holding_cpu and enqueue directly + * into dst_rq's local DSQ (no lock swap needed) + * 8. Otherwise: call move_remote_task_to_local_dsq(), which releases + * src_rq, locks dst_rq, and performs the deactivate/activate + * migration cycle (dst_rq is held on return) + * 9. Unlock dst_rq and re-lock the current CPU's rq to restore + * the lock state expected by the caller + * + * If any verification fails, abort the migration. + * + * This state tracking allows the BPF scheduler to try to dispatch any task + * at any time regardless of its state. The SCX core can safely + * reject/ignore invalid dispatches, simplifying the BPF scheduler + * implementation. */ enum scx_ops_state { SCX_OPSS_NONE, /* owned by the SCX core */ |
