On 23-Jan 14:33, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 10:15:07AM +0000, Patrick Bellasi wrote:
> > +static __always_inline
> > +unsigned int uclamp_util_with(struct rq *rq, unsigned int util,
> > +                         struct task_struct *p)
> >  {
> >     unsigned int min_util = READ_ONCE(rq->uclamp[UCLAMP_MIN].value);
> >     unsigned int max_util = READ_ONCE(rq->uclamp[UCLAMP_MAX].value);
> >  
> > +   if (p) {
> > +           min_util = max(min_util, uclamp_effective_value(p, UCLAMP_MIN));
> > +           max_util = max(max_util, uclamp_effective_value(p, UCLAMP_MAX));
> > +   }
> > +
> 
> Like I think you mentioned earlier; this doesn't look right at all.

What we wanna do here is to compute what _will_ be the clamp values of
a CPU if we enqueue *p on it.

The code above starts from the current CPU clamp value and mimics what
uclamp will do in case we move the task there... which is always a max
aggregation.

> Should that not be something like:
> 
>       lo = READ_ONCE(rq->uclamp[UCLAMP_MIN].value);
>       hi = READ_ONCE(rq->uclamp[UCLAMP_MAX].value);
> 
>       min_util = clamp(uclamp_effective(p, UCLAMP_MIN), lo, hi);
>       max_util = clamp(uclamp_effective(p, UCLAMP_MAX), lo, hi);

Here you end up with a restriction of the task clamp (effective)
clamps values considering the CPU clamps... which is different.

Why do you think we should do that?... perhaps I'm missing something.

-- 
#include <best/regards.h>

Patrick Bellasi

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