Messages in this thread |  | | From | Linus Torvalds <> | Date | Sun, 24 Apr 2022 11:59:49 -0700 | Subject | Re: [GIT PULL] sched/urgent for 5.18-rc4 |
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On Sun, Apr 24, 2022 at 2:55 AM Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de> wrote: > > - Fix a corner case when calculating sched runqueue variables
This worries me.
It now does:
+ if (se_weight(se) < se->avg.load_sum) + se->avg.load_sum = div_u64(se->avg.load_sum, se_weight(se));
and at no point does it check if se_weight(se) is zero.
It *used* to check for that divide-by-zero issue, so from what I can tell, a zero se_weight() is actually possible.
Now, it's entirely possible that no, se_weight() can never go down to zero. But it's not obvious,. and the commit message doesn't mention this change at all.
So I pulled, but then after looking at it I unpulled again in the hopes that somebody will clarify the issue for me.
And scale_load_down() (in se_weight()) does try to make the result be at least 2 on 64-bit, but only if the original wasn't zero. Very confusing.
So can somebody please tell me why se_weight() cannot be 0, and why we _used_ to check for zero? Because that commit sure as heck doesn't explain it.
And - as usual with the -tip tree - the "Link:" thing is almost entirely pointless. It doesn't actually point to any discussion of the problems, it only points to the patch submission.
I realize that is convenient for automation, but it's really not generally a very useful link. It would be much more useful to link to whatever problem report that actually *causes* the submission, not to the submission itself. We already see the end result in the commit, it's the "how did we get here" that is the most interesting part.
And no, I don't see any explanation for "why se_weight() cannot be zero" in that submission thread either.
Somebody please hit me over the head with a clue bat.
Linus
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