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* Re: [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes
       [not found] <20220112152609.gg2boujeh5vv5cns@yadro.com>
@ 2022-01-16  9:55 ` Thorsten Leemhuis
       [not found] ` <20220112170512.GO3301@suse.de>
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-01-16  9:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alexander Fomichev, linux-kernel, dmaengine
  Cc: Mel Gorman, linux, regressions


[TLDR: I'm adding this regression to regzbot, the Linux kernel
regression tracking bot; most text you find below is compiled from a few
templates paragraphs some of you might have seen already.]

Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker speaking.

Thanks for the report.

Adding the regression mailing list to the list of recipients, as it
should be in the loop for all regressions, as explained here:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/reporting-issues.html

To be sure this issue doesn't fall through the cracks unnoticed, I'm
adding it to regzbot, my Linux kernel regression tracking bot:

On 12.01.22 16:26, Alexander Fomichev wrote:
> CC: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
> CC: linux@yadro.com
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> There's a huge regression found, which affects Intel Xeon's DMA Engine
> performance between v4.14 LTS and modern kernels. In certain
> circumstances the speed in dmatest is more than 6 times lower.
> 
> 	- Hardware -
> I did testing on 2 systems:
> 1) Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6132 CPU @ 2.60GHz (Supermicro X11DAi-N)
> 2) Intel(R) Xeon(R) Bronze 3204 CPU @ 1.90GHz (YADRO Vegman S220)
> 
> 	- Measurement -
> The dmatest result speed decreases with almost any test settings.
> Although the most significant impact is revealed with 64K transfers. The
> following parameters were used:
> 
> modprobe dmatest iterations=1000 timeout=2000 test_buf_size=0x100000 transfer_size=0x10000 norandom=1
> echo "dma0chan0" > /sys/module/dmatest/parameters/channel
> echo 1 > /sys/module/dmatest/parameters/run
> 
> Every test csse was performed at least 3 times. All detailed results are
> below.
> 
> 	- Analysis -
> Bisecting revealed 2 different bad commits for those 2 systems, but both
> change the same function/condition in the same file.
> For the system (1) the bad commit is:
> [7332dec055f2457c386032f7e9b2991eb05c2a0a] sched/fair: Only immediately migrate tasks due to interrupts if prev and target CPUs share cache
> For the system (2) the bad commit is:
> [806486c377e33ab662de6d47902e9e2a32b79368] sched/fair: Do not migrate if the prev_cpu is idle

Uhh, regzbot is not prepared for this, hence I'll simply pick
7332dec055f2457c386032f7e9b2991eb05c2a0a

#regzbot ^introduced 7332dec055f2457c386032f7e9b2991eb05c2a0a
#regzbot title sched: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes
#regzbot ignore-activity

Reminder: when fixing the issue, please add a 'Link:' tag with the URL
to the report (the parent of this mail) using the kernel.org redirector,
as explained in 'Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst'. Regzbot
then will automatically mark the regression as resolved once the fix
lands in the appropriate tree. For more details about regzbot see footer.

Sending this to everyone that got the initial report, to make all aware
of the tracking. I also hope that messages like this motivate people to
directly get at least the regression mailing list and ideally even
regzbot involved when dealing with regressions, as messages like this
wouldn't be needed then.

Don't worry, I'll send further messages wrt to this regression just to
the lists (with a tag in the subject so people can filter them away), as
long as they are intended just for regzbot. With a bit of luck no such
messages will be needed anyway.

Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'Linux kernel regression tracker' hat)

P.S.: As a Linux kernel regression tracker I'm getting a lot of reports
on my table. I can only look briefly into most of them. Unfortunately
therefore I sometimes will get things wrong or miss something important.
I hope that's not the case here; if you think it is, don't hesitate to
tell me about it in a public reply, that's in everyone's interest.

BTW, I have no personal interest in this issue, which is tracked using
regzbot, my Linux kernel regression tracking bot
(https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/regzbot/). I'm only posting
this mail to get things rolling again and hence don't need to be CC on
all further activities wrt to this regression.

> 	- Additional check -
> Attempting to revert the changes above, a dirty patch for the (current)
> kernel v5.16.0-rc5 was tested too:
> 
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> index 6f16dfb74246..0a58cc00b1b8 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> @@ -5931,8 +5931,8 @@ wake_affine_idle(int this_cpu, int prev_cpu, int sync)
>          * a cpufreq perspective, it's better to have higher utilisation
>          * on one CPU.
>          */
> -       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu) && cpus_share_cache(this_cpu, prev_cpu))
> -               return available_idle_cpu(prev_cpu) ? prev_cpu : this_cpu;
> +       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu))
> +               return this_cpu;
> 
>         if (sync && cpu_rq(this_cpu)->nr_running == 1)
>                 return this_cpu;
> 
> Please, take a look if this makes sense. But with this patch applied the
> performance of DMA Engine restores.
> 
> 	- Dmatest results TL;DR -
> 
> System (1) before bad commit:
> ---------------------
> [  519.894642] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  525.383021] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  528.521915] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 98367.10 iops 6295494 KB/s (0)
> [  544.851751] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  546.460064] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  549.609504] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 100310.96 iops 6419901 KB/s (0)
> [  562.178365] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  563.852534] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  567.004898] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 98580.44 iops 6309148 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> System (1) on HEAD=bad commit:
> ---------------------
> [  149.555401] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  154.162444] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  157.490868] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 26653.87 iops 1705847 KB/s (0)
> [  176.783450] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  178.428518] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  181.606531] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 14194.86 iops 908471 KB/s (0)
> [  192.125218] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  194.060029] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  197.235265] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 14757.09 iops 944454 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> Systen (1) on v5.16.0-rc5:
> ---------------------
> [ 1430.860170] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1437.367447] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1442.756660] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 24837.31 iops 1589588 KB/s (0)
> [ 1561.614191] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1562.816375] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1566.619614] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 13666.05 iops 874627 KB/s (0)
> [ 1585.019601] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1587.585741] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 1591.386816] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 13521.91 iops 865402 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> System (1) on v5.16.0-rc5 with dirty patch:
> ---------------------
> [  733.571508] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  746.050800] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  749.765600] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 87260.03 iops 5584642 KB/s (0)
> [  915.051955] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  916.550732] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  920.267525] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 88464.25 iops 5661712 KB/s (0)
> [  936.781273] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  939.528616] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  943.247694] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 88833.61 iops 5685351 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> System (2) before bad commit:
> ---------------------
> [  481.309411] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  491.197425] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  497.047315] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 78988.94 iops 5055292 KB/s (0)
> [  506.057101] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  508.939426] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  514.788823] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 77754.44 iops 4976284 KB/s (0)
> [  531.894587] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  534.053360] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [  539.906424] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 76988.21 iops 4927246 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> System (2) on HEAD=bad commit:
> ---------------------
> [44522.892995] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44526.193331] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44532.043932] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 80360.01 iops 5143040 KB/s (0)
> [44561.121118] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44562.868428] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44568.808577] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 16080.53 iops 1029154 KB/s (0)
> [44728.597409] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44730.301566] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [44736.259009] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 16091.91 iops 1029882 KB/s (0)
> ---------------------
> 
> Thanks for reading.
> 

---
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Hint for developers: you normally don't need to care about regzbot once
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That aspect was recently was made more explicit in commit 1f57bd42b77c:
https://git.kernel.org/linus/1f57bd42b77c

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes
       [not found]             ` <20220128165058.zxyrnd7nzr4hlks2@yadro.com>
@ 2022-02-23 15:24               ` Thorsten Leemhuis
  2022-03-06 11:19                 ` [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes #forregzbot Thorsten Leemhuis
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-02-23 15:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alexander Fomichev, Hillf Danton
  Cc: Mel Gorman, linux-kernel, dmaengine, linux, Peter Zijlstra, regressions

Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. Top-posting for once,
to make this easy accessible to everyone.

After below message nothing happened anymore afaics. Could anybody be so
kind to provide a quick status update, to ensure this wasn't simply
forgotten? And if this is not considered a regression anymore (I didn#t
fully understand below message, sorry), it would be ideal if the person
that replies could include a paragraph stating something like "#regzbot
invalid: Some reason why this can be ignored", as then I'll stop
tracking this. tia!

Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat)

P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I'm getting a lot of
reports on my table. I can only look briefly into most of them and lack
knowledge about most of the areas they concern. I thus unfortunately
will sometimes get things wrong or miss something important. I hope
that's not the case here; if you think it is, don't hesitate to tell me
in a public reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record
straight.

#regzbot poke

On 28.01.22 17:50, Alexander Fomichev wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 23, 2022 at 07:33:14AM +0800, Hillf Danton wrote:
>>
>> Lets put pieces together based on the data collected.
>>
>> 1, No irq migration was observed.
>>
>> 2, Your patch that produced the highest iops fo far
>>
>> -----< 5.15.8-ioat-ptdma-dirty-fix+ >-----
>> [ 6183.356549] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6187.868237] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6187.887389] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 52753.74 iops 3376239 KB/s (0)
>> [ 6201.913154] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6204.701340] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6204.720490] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 52614.96 iops 3367357 KB/s (0)
>> [ 6285.114603] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6287.031875] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 6287.050278] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54939.01 iops 3516097 KB/s (0)
>> -----< end >-----
>>
>>
>> -       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu) && cpus_share_cache(this_cpu, prev_cpu))
>> -               return available_idle_cpu(prev_cpu) ? prev_cpu : this_cpu;
>> +       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu))
>> +               return this_cpu;
>>
>> prefers this cpu if it is idle regardless of cache affinity.
>>
>> This implies task migration to the cpu that handled irq.
>>
>> 3, Given this cpu is different from the prev cpu in addition to no irq
>> migration, the tested task was bouncing between the two cpus, with one
>> more question rising, why was task migrated off from the irq-handling cpu?
>>
>> Despite no evidence, I bet no bounce occurred given iops observed.
>>
> 
> IMHO, your assumptions are correct.
> I've added CPU number counters on every step of dmatest. It reveals that
> test task migration between (at least 2) CPUs occurs in even one thread
> mode. Below is for vanilla 5.15.8 kernel:
> 
> -----< threads_per_chan=1 >-----
> [19449.557950] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [19469.238180] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [19469.253962] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 65291.19 iops 4178636 KB/s (0)
> [19469.253973] dmatest: CPUs hit: #52:417 #63:583  (times)
> -----< end >-----
> 
> Note that IRQ handler runs on CPU #52 in this environment.
> 
> In 4 thread mode the task migrates even more aggressively:
> 
> -----< threads_per_chan=4 >-----
> [19355.460227] dmatest: Added 4 threads using dma0chan0
> [19359.841182] dmatest: Started 4 threads using dma0chan0
> [19359.860447] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy3: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 53908.35 iops 3450134 KB/s (0)
> [19359.860451] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy2: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54179.98 iops 3467519 KB/s (0)
> [19359.860456] dmatest: CPUs hit: #50:1000  (times)
> [19359.860459] dmatest: CPUs hit: #17:1000  (times)
> [19359.860459] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54048.21 iops 3459085 KB/s (0)
> [19359.860466] dmatest: CPUs hit: #31:1000  (times)
> [19359.861420] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy1: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 51466.80 iops 3293875 KB/s (0)
> [19359.861425] dmatest: CPUs hit: #30:213 #48:556 #52:231  (times)
> -----< end >-----
> 
> On the other hand, for dirty-patched kernel task doesn't migrate:
> 
> -----< patched threads_per_chan=1 >-----
> [ 2100.142002] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 2102.359727] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
> [ 2102.373594] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 76173.06 iops 4875076 KB/s (0)
> [ 2102.373600] dmatest: CPUs hit: #49:1000  (times)
> -----< end >-----
> 
> IRQ handler runs on CPU #49 in this case.
> 
> Although in 4 thread mode the task still migrates. I think we should
> consider such scenario as non-relevant for this isue.
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes #forregzbot
  2022-02-23 15:24               ` Thorsten Leemhuis
@ 2022-03-06 11:19                 ` Thorsten Leemhuis
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-03-06 11:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: regressions

TWIMC: this mail is primarily send for documentation purposes and for
regzbot, my Linux kernel regression tracking bot. These mails usually
contain '#forregzbot' in the subject, to make them easy to spot and filter.

Not totally sure, but I got the impression even the reporter (who I
asked in private a while ago, but I didn't get a reply) doesn't care
about this regressions anymore, so I'm removing it from the list for
tracked regressions

#regzbot invalid: seems it can be ignored

On 23.02.22 16:24, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote:
> Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. Top-posting for once,
> to make this easy accessible to everyone.
> 
> After below message nothing happened anymore afaics. Could anybody be so
> kind to provide a quick status update, to ensure this wasn't simply
> forgotten? And if this is not considered a regression anymore (I didn#t
> fully understand below message, sorry), it would be ideal if the person
> that replies could include a paragraph stating something like "#regzbot
> invalid: Some reason why this can be ignored", as then I'll stop
> tracking this. tia!
> 
> Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat)
> 
> P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I'm getting a lot of
> reports on my table. I can only look briefly into most of them and lack
> knowledge about most of the areas they concern. I thus unfortunately
> will sometimes get things wrong or miss something important. I hope
> that's not the case here; if you think it is, don't hesitate to tell me
> in a public reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record
> straight.
> 
> #regzbot poke
> 
> On 28.01.22 17:50, Alexander Fomichev wrote:
>> On Sun, Jan 23, 2022 at 07:33:14AM +0800, Hillf Danton wrote:
>>>
>>> Lets put pieces together based on the data collected.
>>>
>>> 1, No irq migration was observed.
>>>
>>> 2, Your patch that produced the highest iops fo far
>>>
>>> -----< 5.15.8-ioat-ptdma-dirty-fix+ >-----
>>> [ 6183.356549] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6187.868237] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6187.887389] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 52753.74 iops 3376239 KB/s (0)
>>> [ 6201.913154] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6204.701340] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6204.720490] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 52614.96 iops 3367357 KB/s (0)
>>> [ 6285.114603] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6287.031875] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>>> [ 6287.050278] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54939.01 iops 3516097 KB/s (0)
>>> -----< end >-----
>>>
>>>
>>> -       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu) && cpus_share_cache(this_cpu, prev_cpu))
>>> -               return available_idle_cpu(prev_cpu) ? prev_cpu : this_cpu;
>>> +       if (available_idle_cpu(this_cpu))
>>> +               return this_cpu;
>>>
>>> prefers this cpu if it is idle regardless of cache affinity.
>>>
>>> This implies task migration to the cpu that handled irq.
>>>
>>> 3, Given this cpu is different from the prev cpu in addition to no irq
>>> migration, the tested task was bouncing between the two cpus, with one
>>> more question rising, why was task migrated off from the irq-handling cpu?
>>>
>>> Despite no evidence, I bet no bounce occurred given iops observed.
>>>
>>
>> IMHO, your assumptions are correct.
>> I've added CPU number counters on every step of dmatest. It reveals that
>> test task migration between (at least 2) CPUs occurs in even one thread
>> mode. Below is for vanilla 5.15.8 kernel:
>>
>> -----< threads_per_chan=1 >-----
>> [19449.557950] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [19469.238180] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [19469.253962] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 65291.19 iops 4178636 KB/s (0)
>> [19469.253973] dmatest: CPUs hit: #52:417 #63:583  (times)
>> -----< end >-----
>>
>> Note that IRQ handler runs on CPU #52 in this environment.
>>
>> In 4 thread mode the task migrates even more aggressively:
>>
>> -----< threads_per_chan=4 >-----
>> [19355.460227] dmatest: Added 4 threads using dma0chan0
>> [19359.841182] dmatest: Started 4 threads using dma0chan0
>> [19359.860447] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy3: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 53908.35 iops 3450134 KB/s (0)
>> [19359.860451] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy2: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54179.98 iops 3467519 KB/s (0)
>> [19359.860456] dmatest: CPUs hit: #50:1000  (times)
>> [19359.860459] dmatest: CPUs hit: #17:1000  (times)
>> [19359.860459] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 54048.21 iops 3459085 KB/s (0)
>> [19359.860466] dmatest: CPUs hit: #31:1000  (times)
>> [19359.861420] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy1: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 51466.80 iops 3293875 KB/s (0)
>> [19359.861425] dmatest: CPUs hit: #30:213 #48:556 #52:231  (times)
>> -----< end >-----
>>
>> On the other hand, for dirty-patched kernel task doesn't migrate:
>>
>> -----< patched threads_per_chan=1 >-----
>> [ 2100.142002] dmatest: Added 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 2102.359727] dmatest: Started 1 threads using dma0chan0
>> [ 2102.373594] dmatest: dma0chan0-copy0: summary 1000 tests, 0 failures 76173.06 iops 4875076 KB/s (0)
>> [ 2102.373600] dmatest: CPUs hit: #49:1000  (times)
>> -----< end >-----
>>
>> IRQ handler runs on CPU #49 in this case.
>>
>> Although in 4 thread mode the task still migrates. I think we should
>> consider such scenario as non-relevant for this isue.
>>
> 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

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2022-01-16  9:55 ` [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes Thorsten Leemhuis
     [not found] ` <20220112170512.GO3301@suse.de>
     [not found]   ` <20220117081905.a4pwglxqj7dqpyql@yadro.com>
     [not found]     ` <20220117102701.GQ3301@suse.de>
     [not found]       ` <20220118020448.2399-1-hdanton@sina.com>
     [not found]         ` <20220121101217.2849-1-hdanton@sina.com>
     [not found]           ` <20220122233314.2999-1-hdanton@sina.com>
     [not found]             ` <20220128165058.zxyrnd7nzr4hlks2@yadro.com>
2022-02-23 15:24               ` Thorsten Leemhuis
2022-03-06 11:19                 ` [RFC] Scheduler: DMA Engine regression because of sched/fair changes #forregzbot Thorsten Leemhuis

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