linux/Documentation/scheduler/sched-bwc.rst
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   1=====================
   2CFS Bandwidth Control
   3=====================
   4
   5.. note::
   6   This document only discusses CPU bandwidth control for SCHED_NORMAL.
   7   The SCHED_RT case is covered in Documentation/scheduler/sched-rt-group.rst
   8
   9CFS bandwidth control is a CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED extension which allows the
  10specification of the maximum CPU bandwidth available to a group or hierarchy.
  11
  12The bandwidth allowed for a group is specified using a quota and period. Within
  13each given "period" (microseconds), a task group is allocated up to "quota"
  14microseconds of CPU time. That quota is assigned to per-cpu run queues in
  15slices as threads in the cgroup become runnable. Once all quota has been
  16assigned any additional requests for quota will result in those threads being
  17throttled. Throttled threads will not be able to run again until the next
  18period when the quota is replenished.
  19
  20A group's unassigned quota is globally tracked, being refreshed back to
  21cfs_quota units at each period boundary. As threads consume this bandwidth it
  22is transferred to cpu-local "silos" on a demand basis. The amount transferred
  23within each of these updates is tunable and described as the "slice".
  24
  25Burst feature
  26-------------
  27This feature borrows time now against our future underrun, at the cost of
  28increased interference against the other system users. All nicely bounded.
  29
  30Traditional (UP-EDF) bandwidth control is something like:
  31
  32  (U = \Sum u_i) <= 1
  33
  34This guaranteeds both that every deadline is met and that the system is
  35stable. After all, if U were > 1, then for every second of walltime,
  36we'd have to run more than a second of program time, and obviously miss
  37our deadline, but the next deadline will be further out still, there is
  38never time to catch up, unbounded fail.
  39
  40The burst feature observes that a workload doesn't always executes the full
  41quota; this enables one to describe u_i as a statistical distribution.
  42
  43For example, have u_i = {x,e}_i, where x is the p(95) and x+e p(100)
  44(the traditional WCET). This effectively allows u to be smaller,
  45increasing the efficiency (we can pack more tasks in the system), but at
  46the cost of missing deadlines when all the odds line up. However, it
  47does maintain stability, since every overrun must be paired with an
  48underrun as long as our x is above the average.
  49
  50That is, suppose we have 2 tasks, both specify a p(95) value, then we
  51have a p(95)*p(95) = 90.25% chance both tasks are within their quota and
  52everything is good. At the same time we have a p(5)p(5) = 0.25% chance
  53both tasks will exceed their quota at the same time (guaranteed deadline
  54fail). Somewhere in between there's a threshold where one exceeds and
  55the other doesn't underrun enough to compensate; this depends on the
  56specific CDFs.
  57
  58At the same time, we can say that the worst case deadline miss, will be
  59\Sum e_i; that is, there is a bounded tardiness (under the assumption
  60that x+e is indeed WCET).
  61
  62The interferenece when using burst is valued by the possibilities for
  63missing the deadline and the average WCET. Test results showed that when
  64there many cgroups or CPU is under utilized, the interference is
  65limited. More details are shown in:
  66https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/5371BD36-55AE-4F71-B9D7-B86DC32E3D2B@linux.alibaba.com/
  67
  68Management
  69----------
  70Quota, period and burst are managed within the cpu subsystem via cgroupfs.
  71
  72.. note::
  73   The cgroupfs files described in this section are only applicable
  74   to cgroup v1. For cgroup v2, see
  75   :ref:`Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v2.rst <cgroup-v2-cpu>`.
  76
  77- cpu.cfs_quota_us: run-time replenished within a period (in microseconds)
  78- cpu.cfs_period_us: the length of a period (in microseconds)
  79- cpu.stat: exports throttling statistics [explained further below]
  80- cpu.cfs_burst_us: the maximum accumulated run-time (in microseconds)
  81
  82The default values are::
  83
  84        cpu.cfs_period_us=100ms
  85        cpu.cfs_quota_us=-1
  86        cpu.cfs_burst_us=0
  87
  88A value of -1 for cpu.cfs_quota_us indicates that the group does not have any
  89bandwidth restriction in place, such a group is described as an unconstrained
  90bandwidth group. This represents the traditional work-conserving behavior for
  91CFS.
  92
  93Writing any (valid) positive value(s) no smaller than cpu.cfs_burst_us will
  94enact the specified bandwidth limit. The minimum quota allowed for the quota or
  95period is 1ms. There is also an upper bound on the period length of 1s.
  96Additional restrictions exist when bandwidth limits are used in a hierarchical
  97fashion, these are explained in more detail below.
  98
  99Writing any negative value to cpu.cfs_quota_us will remove the bandwidth limit
 100and return the group to an unconstrained state once more.
 101
 102A value of 0 for cpu.cfs_burst_us indicates that the group can not accumulate
 103any unused bandwidth. It makes the traditional bandwidth control behavior for
 104CFS unchanged. Writing any (valid) positive value(s) no larger than
 105cpu.cfs_quota_us into cpu.cfs_burst_us will enact the cap on unused bandwidth
 106accumulation.
 107
 108Any updates to a group's bandwidth specification will result in it becoming
 109unthrottled if it is in a constrained state.
 110
 111System wide settings
 112--------------------
 113For efficiency run-time is transferred between the global pool and CPU local
 114"silos" in a batch fashion. This greatly reduces global accounting pressure
 115on large systems. The amount transferred each time such an update is required
 116is described as the "slice".
 117
 118This is tunable via procfs::
 119
 120        /proc/sys/kernel/sched_cfs_bandwidth_slice_us (default=5ms)
 121
 122Larger slice values will reduce transfer overheads, while smaller values allow
 123for more fine-grained consumption.
 124
 125Statistics
 126----------
 127A group's bandwidth statistics are exported via 5 fields in cpu.stat.
 128
 129cpu.stat:
 130
 131- nr_periods: Number of enforcement intervals that have elapsed.
 132- nr_throttled: Number of times the group has been throttled/limited.
 133- throttled_time: The total time duration (in nanoseconds) for which entities
 134  of the group have been throttled.
 135- nr_bursts: Number of periods burst occurs.
 136- burst_time: Cumulative wall-time (in nanoseconds) that any CPUs has used
 137  above quota in respective periods.
 138
 139This interface is read-only.
 140
 141Hierarchical considerations
 142---------------------------
 143The interface enforces that an individual entity's bandwidth is always
 144attainable, that is: max(c_i) <= C. However, over-subscription in the
 145aggregate case is explicitly allowed to enable work-conserving semantics
 146within a hierarchy:
 147
 148  e.g. \Sum (c_i) may exceed C
 149
 150[ Where C is the parent's bandwidth, and c_i its children ]
 151
 152
 153There are two ways in which a group may become throttled:
 154
 155        a. it fully consumes its own quota within a period
 156        b. a parent's quota is fully consumed within its period
 157
 158In case b) above, even though the child may have runtime remaining it will not
 159be allowed to until the parent's runtime is refreshed.
 160
 161CFS Bandwidth Quota Caveats
 162---------------------------
 163Once a slice is assigned to a cpu it does not expire.  However all but 1ms of
 164the slice may be returned to the global pool if all threads on that cpu become
 165unrunnable. This is configured at compile time by the min_cfs_rq_runtime
 166variable. This is a performance tweak that helps prevent added contention on
 167the global lock.
 168
 169The fact that cpu-local slices do not expire results in some interesting corner
 170cases that should be understood.
 171
 172For cgroup cpu constrained applications that are cpu limited this is a
 173relatively moot point because they will naturally consume the entirety of their
 174quota as well as the entirety of each cpu-local slice in each period. As a
 175result it is expected that nr_periods roughly equal nr_throttled, and that
 176cpuacct.usage will increase roughly equal to cfs_quota_us in each period.
 177
 178For highly-threaded, non-cpu bound applications this non-expiration nuance
 179allows applications to briefly burst past their quota limits by the amount of
 180unused slice on each cpu that the task group is running on (typically at most
 1811ms per cpu or as defined by min_cfs_rq_runtime).  This slight burst only
 182applies if quota had been assigned to a cpu and then not fully used or returned
 183in previous periods. This burst amount will not be transferred between cores.
 184As a result, this mechanism still strictly limits the task group to quota
 185average usage, albeit over a longer time window than a single period.  This
 186also limits the burst ability to no more than 1ms per cpu.  This provides
 187better more predictable user experience for highly threaded applications with
 188small quota limits on high core count machines. It also eliminates the
 189propensity to throttle these applications while simultanously using less than
 190quota amounts of cpu. Another way to say this, is that by allowing the unused
 191portion of a slice to remain valid across periods we have decreased the
 192possibility of wastefully expiring quota on cpu-local silos that don't need a
 193full slice's amount of cpu time.
 194
 195The interaction between cpu-bound and non-cpu-bound-interactive applications
 196should also be considered, especially when single core usage hits 100%. If you
 197gave each of these applications half of a cpu-core and they both got scheduled
 198on the same CPU it is theoretically possible that the non-cpu bound application
 199will use up to 1ms additional quota in some periods, thereby preventing the
 200cpu-bound application from fully using its quota by that same amount. In these
 201instances it will be up to the CFS algorithm (see sched-design-CFS.rst) to
 202decide which application is chosen to run, as they will both be runnable and
 203have remaining quota. This runtime discrepancy will be made up in the following
 204periods when the interactive application idles.
 205
 206Examples
 207--------
 2081. Limit a group to 1 CPU worth of runtime::
 209
 210        If period is 250ms and quota is also 250ms, the group will get
 211        1 CPU worth of runtime every 250ms.
 212
 213        # echo 250000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 250ms */
 214        # echo 250000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 250ms */
 215
 2162. Limit a group to 2 CPUs worth of runtime on a multi-CPU machine
 217
 218   With 500ms period and 1000ms quota, the group can get 2 CPUs worth of
 219   runtime every 500ms::
 220
 221        # echo 1000000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 1000ms */
 222        # echo 500000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 500ms */
 223
 224        The larger period here allows for increased burst capacity.
 225
 2263. Limit a group to 20% of 1 CPU.
 227
 228   With 50ms period, 10ms quota will be equivalent to 20% of 1 CPU::
 229
 230        # echo 10000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 10ms */
 231        # echo 50000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 50ms */
 232
 233   By using a small period here we are ensuring a consistent latency
 234   response at the expense of burst capacity.
 235
 2364. Limit a group to 40% of 1 CPU, and allow accumulate up to 20% of 1 CPU
 237   additionally, in case accumulation has been done.
 238
 239   With 50ms period, 20ms quota will be equivalent to 40% of 1 CPU.
 240   And 10ms burst will be equivalent to 20% of 1 CPU::
 241
 242        # echo 20000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 20ms */
 243        # echo 50000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 50ms */
 244        # echo 10000 > cpu.cfs_burst_us /* burst = 10ms */
 245
 246   Larger buffer setting (no larger than quota) allows greater burst capacity.
 247