rcutorture: Use nr_cpus rather than maxcpus to limit test size

The maxcpus= kernel boot parameter limits the number of CPUs brought
online at boot time, but it does nothing to prevent additional CPUs
from being brought up later.  Placing a hard cap on the total number
of CPUs is instead the job of the nr_cpus= boot parameter.  This commit
therefore switches the configfrag_boot_cpus() shell function from maxcpus=
to nr_cpus=.  This commit also adds a nr_cpus=43 kernel parameter to RCU's
TREE01 test scenario, but retains the maxcpus=8 kernel parameter in order
to test the ability of RCU expedited grace periods to handle new CPUs
coming online for the first time during grace-period initialization.
Finally, this commit makes the torture scheduling allow maxcpus= to
override other means of specifying the number of CPUs to allow for.
This last works because the torture kernel modules size their workloads
based on the number of CPUs present at the start of the test, not the
ultimate number of CPUs.

Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This commit is contained in:
Paul E. McKenney 2017-06-09 14:09:21 -07:00
parent b3c983142d
commit c234ee4b82
3 changed files with 28 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -66,8 +66,33 @@ configfrag_boot_params () {
# configfrag_boot_cpus bootparam-string config-fragment-file config-cpus
#
# Decreases number of CPUs based on any maxcpus= boot parameters specified.
# Decreases number of CPUs based on any nr_cpus= boot parameters specified.
configfrag_boot_cpus () {
local bootargs="`configfrag_boot_params "$1" "$2"`"
local nr_cpus
if echo "${bootargs}" | grep -q 'nr_cpus=[0-9]'
then
nr_cpus="`echo "${bootargs}" | sed -e 's/^.*nr_cpus=\([0-9]*\).*$/\1/'`"
if test "$3" -gt "$nr_cpus"
then
echo $nr_cpus
else
echo $3
fi
else
echo $3
fi
}
# configfrag_boot_maxcpus bootparam-string config-fragment-file config-cpus
#
# Decreases number of CPUs based on any maxcpus= boot parameters specified.
# This allows tests where additional CPUs come online later during the
# test run. However, the torture parameters will be set based on the
# number of CPUs initially present, so the scripting should schedule
# test runs based on the maxcpus= boot parameter controlling the initial
# number of CPUs instead of on the ultimate number of CPUs.
configfrag_boot_maxcpus () {
local bootargs="`configfrag_boot_params "$1" "$2"`"
local maxcpus
if echo "${bootargs}" | grep -q 'maxcpus=[0-9]'

View File

@ -212,6 +212,7 @@ do
then
cpu_count=`configNR_CPUS.sh $CONFIGFRAG/$CF1`
cpu_count=`configfrag_boot_cpus "$TORTURE_BOOTARGS" "$CONFIGFRAG/$CF1" "$cpu_count"`
cpu_count=`configfrag_boot_maxcpus "$TORTURE_BOOTARGS" "$CONFIGFRAG/$CF1" "$cpu_count"`
for ((cur_rep=0;cur_rep<$config_reps;cur_rep++))
do
echo $CF1 $cpu_count >> $T/cfgcpu

View File

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
rcutorture.torture_type=rcu_bh maxcpus=8
rcutorture.torture_type=rcu_bh maxcpus=8 nr_cpus=43
rcutree.gp_preinit_delay=3
rcutree.gp_init_delay=3
rcutree.gp_cleanup_delay=3