xref: /linux/Documentation/core-api/workqueue.rst (revision 7f71507851fc7764b36a3221839607d3a45c2025)
1=========
2Workqueue
3=========
4
5:Date: September, 2010
6:Author: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
7:Author: Florian Mickler <florian@mickler.org>
8
9
10Introduction
11============
12
13There are many cases where an asynchronous process execution context
14is needed and the workqueue (wq) API is the most commonly used
15mechanism for such cases.
16
17When such an asynchronous execution context is needed, a work item
18describing which function to execute is put on a queue.  An
19independent thread serves as the asynchronous execution context.  The
20queue is called workqueue and the thread is called worker.
21
22While there are work items on the workqueue the worker executes the
23functions associated with the work items one after the other.  When
24there is no work item left on the workqueue the worker becomes idle.
25When a new work item gets queued, the worker begins executing again.
26
27
28Why Concurrency Managed Workqueue?
29==================================
30
31In the original wq implementation, a multi threaded (MT) wq had one
32worker thread per CPU and a single threaded (ST) wq had one worker
33thread system-wide.  A single MT wq needed to keep around the same
34number of workers as the number of CPUs.  The kernel grew a lot of MT
35wq users over the years and with the number of CPU cores continuously
36rising, some systems saturated the default 32k PID space just booting
37up.
38
39Although MT wq wasted a lot of resource, the level of concurrency
40provided was unsatisfactory.  The limitation was common to both ST and
41MT wq albeit less severe on MT.  Each wq maintained its own separate
42worker pool.  An MT wq could provide only one execution context per CPU
43while an ST wq one for the whole system.  Work items had to compete for
44those very limited execution contexts leading to various problems
45including proneness to deadlocks around the single execution context.
46
47The tension between the provided level of concurrency and resource
48usage also forced its users to make unnecessary tradeoffs like libata
49choosing to use ST wq for polling PIOs and accepting an unnecessary
50limitation that no two polling PIOs can progress at the same time.  As
51MT wq don't provide much better concurrency, users which require
52higher level of concurrency, like async or fscache, had to implement
53their own thread pool.
54
55Concurrency Managed Workqueue (cmwq) is a reimplementation of wq with
56focus on the following goals.
57
58* Maintain compatibility with the original workqueue API.
59
60* Use per-CPU unified worker pools shared by all wq to provide
61  flexible level of concurrency on demand without wasting a lot of
62  resource.
63
64* Automatically regulate worker pool and level of concurrency so that
65  the API users don't need to worry about such details.
66
67
68The Design
69==========
70
71In order to ease the asynchronous execution of functions a new
72abstraction, the work item, is introduced.
73
74A work item is a simple struct that holds a pointer to the function
75that is to be executed asynchronously.  Whenever a driver or subsystem
76wants a function to be executed asynchronously it has to set up a work
77item pointing to that function and queue that work item on a
78workqueue.
79
80A work item can be executed in either a thread or the BH (softirq) context.
81
82For threaded workqueues, special purpose threads, called [k]workers, execute
83the functions off of the queue, one after the other. If no work is queued,
84the worker threads become idle. These worker threads are managed in
85worker-pools.
86
87The cmwq design differentiates between the user-facing workqueues that
88subsystems and drivers queue work items on and the backend mechanism
89which manages worker-pools and processes the queued work items.
90
91There are two worker-pools, one for normal work items and the other
92for high priority ones, for each possible CPU and some extra
93worker-pools to serve work items queued on unbound workqueues - the
94number of these backing pools is dynamic.
95
96BH workqueues use the same framework. However, as there can only be one
97concurrent execution context, there's no need to worry about concurrency.
98Each per-CPU BH worker pool contains only one pseudo worker which represents
99the BH execution context. A BH workqueue can be considered a convenience
100interface to softirq.
101
102Subsystems and drivers can create and queue work items through special
103workqueue API functions as they see fit. They can influence some
104aspects of the way the work items are executed by setting flags on the
105workqueue they are putting the work item on. These flags include
106things like CPU locality, concurrency limits, priority and more.  To
107get a detailed overview refer to the API description of
108``alloc_workqueue()`` below.
109
110When a work item is queued to a workqueue, the target worker-pool is
111determined according to the queue parameters and workqueue attributes
112and appended on the shared worklist of the worker-pool.  For example,
113unless specifically overridden, a work item of a bound workqueue will
114be queued on the worklist of either normal or highpri worker-pool that
115is associated to the CPU the issuer is running on.
116
117For any thread pool implementation, managing the concurrency level
118(how many execution contexts are active) is an important issue.  cmwq
119tries to keep the concurrency at a minimal but sufficient level.
120Minimal to save resources and sufficient in that the system is used at
121its full capacity.
122
123Each worker-pool bound to an actual CPU implements concurrency
124management by hooking into the scheduler.  The worker-pool is notified
125whenever an active worker wakes up or sleeps and keeps track of the
126number of the currently runnable workers.  Generally, work items are
127not expected to hog a CPU and consume many cycles.  That means
128maintaining just enough concurrency to prevent work processing from
129stalling should be optimal.  As long as there are one or more runnable
130workers on the CPU, the worker-pool doesn't start execution of a new
131work, but, when the last running worker goes to sleep, it immediately
132schedules a new worker so that the CPU doesn't sit idle while there
133are pending work items.  This allows using a minimal number of workers
134without losing execution bandwidth.
135
136Keeping idle workers around doesn't cost other than the memory space
137for kthreads, so cmwq holds onto idle ones for a while before killing
138them.
139
140For unbound workqueues, the number of backing pools is dynamic.
141Unbound workqueue can be assigned custom attributes using
142``apply_workqueue_attrs()`` and workqueue will automatically create
143backing worker pools matching the attributes.  The responsibility of
144regulating concurrency level is on the users.  There is also a flag to
145mark a bound wq to ignore the concurrency management.  Please refer to
146the API section for details.
147
148Forward progress guarantee relies on that workers can be created when
149more execution contexts are necessary, which in turn is guaranteed
150through the use of rescue workers.  All work items which might be used
151on code paths that handle memory reclaim are required to be queued on
152wq's that have a rescue-worker reserved for execution under memory
153pressure.  Else it is possible that the worker-pool deadlocks waiting
154for execution contexts to free up.
155
156
157Application Programming Interface (API)
158=======================================
159
160``alloc_workqueue()`` allocates a wq.  The original
161``create_*workqueue()`` functions are deprecated and scheduled for
162removal.  ``alloc_workqueue()`` takes three arguments - ``@name``,
163``@flags`` and ``@max_active``.  ``@name`` is the name of the wq and
164also used as the name of the rescuer thread if there is one.
165
166A wq no longer manages execution resources but serves as a domain for
167forward progress guarantee, flush and work item attributes. ``@flags``
168and ``@max_active`` control how work items are assigned execution
169resources, scheduled and executed.
170
171
172``flags``
173---------
174
175``WQ_BH``
176  BH workqueues can be considered a convenience interface to softirq. BH
177  workqueues are always per-CPU and all BH work items are executed in the
178  queueing CPU's softirq context in the queueing order.
179
180  All BH workqueues must have 0 ``max_active`` and ``WQ_HIGHPRI`` is the
181  only allowed additional flag.
182
183  BH work items cannot sleep. All other features such as delayed queueing,
184  flushing and canceling are supported.
185
186``WQ_UNBOUND``
187  Work items queued to an unbound wq are served by the special
188  worker-pools which host workers which are not bound to any
189  specific CPU.  This makes the wq behave as a simple execution
190  context provider without concurrency management.  The unbound
191  worker-pools try to start execution of work items as soon as
192  possible.  Unbound wq sacrifices locality but is useful for
193  the following cases.
194
195  * Wide fluctuation in the concurrency level requirement is
196    expected and using bound wq may end up creating large number
197    of mostly unused workers across different CPUs as the issuer
198    hops through different CPUs.
199
200  * Long running CPU intensive workloads which can be better
201    managed by the system scheduler.
202
203``WQ_FREEZABLE``
204  A freezable wq participates in the freeze phase of the system
205  suspend operations.  Work items on the wq are drained and no
206  new work item starts execution until thawed.
207
208``WQ_MEM_RECLAIM``
209  All wq which might be used in the memory reclaim paths **MUST**
210  have this flag set.  The wq is guaranteed to have at least one
211  execution context regardless of memory pressure.
212
213``WQ_HIGHPRI``
214  Work items of a highpri wq are queued to the highpri
215  worker-pool of the target cpu.  Highpri worker-pools are
216  served by worker threads with elevated nice level.
217
218  Note that normal and highpri worker-pools don't interact with
219  each other.  Each maintains its separate pool of workers and
220  implements concurrency management among its workers.
221
222``WQ_CPU_INTENSIVE``
223  Work items of a CPU intensive wq do not contribute to the
224  concurrency level.  In other words, runnable CPU intensive
225  work items will not prevent other work items in the same
226  worker-pool from starting execution.  This is useful for bound
227  work items which are expected to hog CPU cycles so that their
228  execution is regulated by the system scheduler.
229
230  Although CPU intensive work items don't contribute to the
231  concurrency level, start of their executions is still
232  regulated by the concurrency management and runnable
233  non-CPU-intensive work items can delay execution of CPU
234  intensive work items.
235
236  This flag is meaningless for unbound wq.
237
238
239``max_active``
240--------------
241
242``@max_active`` determines the maximum number of execution contexts per
243CPU which can be assigned to the work items of a wq. For example, with
244``@max_active`` of 16, at most 16 work items of the wq can be executing
245at the same time per CPU. This is always a per-CPU attribute, even for
246unbound workqueues.
247
248The maximum limit for ``@max_active`` is 2048 and the default value used
249when 0 is specified is 1024. These values are chosen sufficiently high
250such that they are not the limiting factor while providing protection in
251runaway cases.
252
253The number of active work items of a wq is usually regulated by the
254users of the wq, more specifically, by how many work items the users
255may queue at the same time.  Unless there is a specific need for
256throttling the number of active work items, specifying '0' is
257recommended.
258
259Some users depend on strict execution ordering where only one work item
260is in flight at any given time and the work items are processed in
261queueing order. While the combination of ``@max_active`` of 1 and
262``WQ_UNBOUND`` used to achieve this behavior, this is no longer the
263case. Use alloc_ordered_workqueue() instead.
264
265
266Example Execution Scenarios
267===========================
268
269The following example execution scenarios try to illustrate how cmwq
270behave under different configurations.
271
272 Work items w0, w1, w2 are queued to a bound wq q0 on the same CPU.
273 w0 burns CPU for 5ms then sleeps for 10ms then burns CPU for 5ms
274 again before finishing.  w1 and w2 burn CPU for 5ms then sleep for
275 10ms.
276
277Ignoring all other tasks, works and processing overhead, and assuming
278simple FIFO scheduling, the following is one highly simplified version
279of possible sequences of events with the original wq. ::
280
281 TIME IN MSECS	EVENT
282 0		w0 starts and burns CPU
283 5		w0 sleeps
284 15		w0 wakes up and burns CPU
285 20		w0 finishes
286 20		w1 starts and burns CPU
287 25		w1 sleeps
288 35		w1 wakes up and finishes
289 35		w2 starts and burns CPU
290 40		w2 sleeps
291 50		w2 wakes up and finishes
292
293And with cmwq with ``@max_active`` >= 3, ::
294
295 TIME IN MSECS	EVENT
296 0		w0 starts and burns CPU
297 5		w0 sleeps
298 5		w1 starts and burns CPU
299 10		w1 sleeps
300 10		w2 starts and burns CPU
301 15		w2 sleeps
302 15		w0 wakes up and burns CPU
303 20		w0 finishes
304 20		w1 wakes up and finishes
305 25		w2 wakes up and finishes
306
307If ``@max_active`` == 2, ::
308
309 TIME IN MSECS	EVENT
310 0		w0 starts and burns CPU
311 5		w0 sleeps
312 5		w1 starts and burns CPU
313 10		w1 sleeps
314 15		w0 wakes up and burns CPU
315 20		w0 finishes
316 20		w1 wakes up and finishes
317 20		w2 starts and burns CPU
318 25		w2 sleeps
319 35		w2 wakes up and finishes
320
321Now, let's assume w1 and w2 are queued to a different wq q1 which has
322``WQ_CPU_INTENSIVE`` set, ::
323
324 TIME IN MSECS	EVENT
325 0		w0 starts and burns CPU
326 5		w0 sleeps
327 5		w1 and w2 start and burn CPU
328 10		w1 sleeps
329 15		w2 sleeps
330 15		w0 wakes up and burns CPU
331 20		w0 finishes
332 20		w1 wakes up and finishes
333 25		w2 wakes up and finishes
334
335
336Guidelines
337==========
338
339* Do not forget to use ``WQ_MEM_RECLAIM`` if a wq may process work
340  items which are used during memory reclaim.  Each wq with
341  ``WQ_MEM_RECLAIM`` set has an execution context reserved for it.  If
342  there is dependency among multiple work items used during memory
343  reclaim, they should be queued to separate wq each with
344  ``WQ_MEM_RECLAIM``.
345
346* Unless strict ordering is required, there is no need to use ST wq.
347
348* Unless there is a specific need, using 0 for @max_active is
349  recommended.  In most use cases, concurrency level usually stays
350  well under the default limit.
351
352* A wq serves as a domain for forward progress guarantee
353  (``WQ_MEM_RECLAIM``, flush and work item attributes.  Work items
354  which are not involved in memory reclaim and don't need to be
355  flushed as a part of a group of work items, and don't require any
356  special attribute, can use one of the system wq.  There is no
357  difference in execution characteristics between using a dedicated wq
358  and a system wq.
359
360  Note: If something may generate more than @max_active outstanding
361  work items (do stress test your producers), it may saturate a system
362  wq and potentially lead to deadlock. It should utilize its own
363  dedicated workqueue rather than the system wq.
364
365* Unless work items are expected to consume a huge amount of CPU
366  cycles, using a bound wq is usually beneficial due to the increased
367  level of locality in wq operations and work item execution.
368
369
370Affinity Scopes
371===============
372
373An unbound workqueue groups CPUs according to its affinity scope to improve
374cache locality. For example, if a workqueue is using the default affinity
375scope of "cache", it will group CPUs according to last level cache
376boundaries. A work item queued on the workqueue will be assigned to a worker
377on one of the CPUs which share the last level cache with the issuing CPU.
378Once started, the worker may or may not be allowed to move outside the scope
379depending on the ``affinity_strict`` setting of the scope.
380
381Workqueue currently supports the following affinity scopes.
382
383``default``
384  Use the scope in module parameter ``workqueue.default_affinity_scope``
385  which is always set to one of the scopes below.
386
387``cpu``
388  CPUs are not grouped. A work item issued on one CPU is processed by a
389  worker on the same CPU. This makes unbound workqueues behave as per-cpu
390  workqueues without concurrency management.
391
392``smt``
393  CPUs are grouped according to SMT boundaries. This usually means that the
394  logical threads of each physical CPU core are grouped together.
395
396``cache``
397  CPUs are grouped according to cache boundaries. Which specific cache
398  boundary is used is determined by the arch code. L3 is used in a lot of
399  cases. This is the default affinity scope.
400
401``numa``
402  CPUs are grouped according to NUMA boundaries.
403
404``system``
405  All CPUs are put in the same group. Workqueue makes no effort to process a
406  work item on a CPU close to the issuing CPU.
407
408The default affinity scope can be changed with the module parameter
409``workqueue.default_affinity_scope`` and a specific workqueue's affinity
410scope can be changed using ``apply_workqueue_attrs()``.
411
412If ``WQ_SYSFS`` is set, the workqueue will have the following affinity scope
413related interface files under its ``/sys/devices/virtual/workqueue/WQ_NAME/``
414directory.
415
416``affinity_scope``
417  Read to see the current affinity scope. Write to change.
418
419  When default is the current scope, reading this file will also show the
420  current effective scope in parentheses, for example, ``default (cache)``.
421
422``affinity_strict``
423  0 by default indicating that affinity scopes are not strict. When a work
424  item starts execution, workqueue makes a best-effort attempt to ensure
425  that the worker is inside its affinity scope, which is called
426  repatriation. Once started, the scheduler is free to move the worker
427  anywhere in the system as it sees fit. This enables benefiting from scope
428  locality while still being able to utilize other CPUs if necessary and
429  available.
430
431  If set to 1, all workers of the scope are guaranteed always to be in the
432  scope. This may be useful when crossing affinity scopes has other
433  implications, for example, in terms of power consumption or workload
434  isolation. Strict NUMA scope can also be used to match the workqueue
435  behavior of older kernels.
436
437
438Affinity Scopes and Performance
439===============================
440
441It'd be ideal if an unbound workqueue's behavior is optimal for vast
442majority of use cases without further tuning. Unfortunately, in the current
443kernel, there exists a pronounced trade-off between locality and utilization
444necessitating explicit configurations when workqueues are heavily used.
445
446Higher locality leads to higher efficiency where more work is performed for
447the same number of consumed CPU cycles. However, higher locality may also
448cause lower overall system utilization if the work items are not spread
449enough across the affinity scopes by the issuers. The following performance
450testing with dm-crypt clearly illustrates this trade-off.
451
452The tests are run on a CPU with 12-cores/24-threads split across four L3
453caches (AMD Ryzen 9 3900x). CPU clock boost is turned off for consistency.
454``/dev/dm-0`` is a dm-crypt device created on NVME SSD (Samsung 990 PRO) and
455opened with ``cryptsetup`` with default settings.
456
457
458Scenario 1: Enough issuers and work spread across the machine
459-------------------------------------------------------------
460
461The command used: ::
462
463  $ fio --filename=/dev/dm-0 --direct=1 --rw=randrw --bs=32k --ioengine=libaio \
464    --iodepth=64 --runtime=60 --numjobs=24 --time_based --group_reporting \
465    --name=iops-test-job --verify=sha512
466
467There are 24 issuers, each issuing 64 IOs concurrently. ``--verify=sha512``
468makes ``fio`` generate and read back the content each time which makes
469execution locality matter between the issuer and ``kcryptd``. The following
470are the read bandwidths and CPU utilizations depending on different affinity
471scope settings on ``kcryptd`` measured over five runs. Bandwidths are in
472MiBps, and CPU util in percents.
473
474.. list-table::
475   :widths: 16 20 20
476   :header-rows: 1
477
478   * - Affinity
479     - Bandwidth (MiBps)
480     - CPU util (%)
481
482   * - system
483     - 1159.40 ±1.34
484     - 99.31 ±0.02
485
486   * - cache
487     - 1166.40 ±0.89
488     - 99.34 ±0.01
489
490   * - cache (strict)
491     - 1166.00 ±0.71
492     - 99.35 ±0.01
493
494With enough issuers spread across the system, there is no downside to
495"cache", strict or otherwise. All three configurations saturate the whole
496machine but the cache-affine ones outperform by 0.6% thanks to improved
497locality.
498
499
500Scenario 2: Fewer issuers, enough work for saturation
501-----------------------------------------------------
502
503The command used: ::
504
505  $ fio --filename=/dev/dm-0 --direct=1 --rw=randrw --bs=32k \
506    --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=64 --runtime=60 --numjobs=8 \
507    --time_based --group_reporting --name=iops-test-job --verify=sha512
508
509The only difference from the previous scenario is ``--numjobs=8``. There are
510a third of the issuers but is still enough total work to saturate the
511system.
512
513.. list-table::
514   :widths: 16 20 20
515   :header-rows: 1
516
517   * - Affinity
518     - Bandwidth (MiBps)
519     - CPU util (%)
520
521   * - system
522     - 1155.40 ±0.89
523     - 97.41 ±0.05
524
525   * - cache
526     - 1154.40 ±1.14
527     - 96.15 ±0.09
528
529   * - cache (strict)
530     - 1112.00 ±4.64
531     - 93.26 ±0.35
532
533This is more than enough work to saturate the system. Both "system" and
534"cache" are nearly saturating the machine but not fully. "cache" is using
535less CPU but the better efficiency puts it at the same bandwidth as
536"system".
537
538Eight issuers moving around over four L3 cache scope still allow "cache
539(strict)" to mostly saturate the machine but the loss of work conservation
540is now starting to hurt with 3.7% bandwidth loss.
541
542
543Scenario 3: Even fewer issuers, not enough work to saturate
544-----------------------------------------------------------
545
546The command used: ::
547
548  $ fio --filename=/dev/dm-0 --direct=1 --rw=randrw --bs=32k \
549    --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=64 --runtime=60 --numjobs=4 \
550    --time_based --group_reporting --name=iops-test-job --verify=sha512
551
552Again, the only difference is ``--numjobs=4``. With the number of issuers
553reduced to four, there now isn't enough work to saturate the whole system
554and the bandwidth becomes dependent on completion latencies.
555
556.. list-table::
557   :widths: 16 20 20
558   :header-rows: 1
559
560   * - Affinity
561     - Bandwidth (MiBps)
562     - CPU util (%)
563
564   * - system
565     - 993.60 ±1.82
566     - 75.49 ±0.06
567
568   * - cache
569     - 973.40 ±1.52
570     - 74.90 ±0.07
571
572   * - cache (strict)
573     - 828.20 ±4.49
574     - 66.84 ±0.29
575
576Now, the tradeoff between locality and utilization is clearer. "cache" shows
5772% bandwidth loss compared to "system" and "cache (struct)" whopping 20%.
578
579
580Conclusion and Recommendations
581------------------------------
582
583In the above experiments, the efficiency advantage of the "cache" affinity
584scope over "system" is, while consistent and noticeable, small. However, the
585impact is dependent on the distances between the scopes and may be more
586pronounced in processors with more complex topologies.
587
588While the loss of work-conservation in certain scenarios hurts, it is a lot
589better than "cache (strict)" and maximizing workqueue utilization is
590unlikely to be the common case anyway. As such, "cache" is the default
591affinity scope for unbound pools.
592
593* As there is no one option which is great for most cases, workqueue usages
594  that may consume a significant amount of CPU are recommended to configure
595  the workqueues using ``apply_workqueue_attrs()`` and/or enable
596  ``WQ_SYSFS``.
597
598* An unbound workqueue with strict "cpu" affinity scope behaves the same as
599  ``WQ_CPU_INTENSIVE`` per-cpu workqueue. There is no real advanage to the
600  latter and an unbound workqueue provides a lot more flexibility.
601
602* Affinity scopes are introduced in Linux v6.5. To emulate the previous
603  behavior, use strict "numa" affinity scope.
604
605* The loss of work-conservation in non-strict affinity scopes is likely
606  originating from the scheduler. There is no theoretical reason why the
607  kernel wouldn't be able to do the right thing and maintain
608  work-conservation in most cases. As such, it is possible that future
609  scheduler improvements may make most of these tunables unnecessary.
610
611
612Examining Configuration
613=======================
614
615Use tools/workqueue/wq_dump.py to examine unbound CPU affinity
616configuration, worker pools and how workqueues map to the pools: ::
617
618  $ tools/workqueue/wq_dump.py
619  Affinity Scopes
620  ===============
621  wq_unbound_cpumask=0000000f
622
623  CPU
624    nr_pods  4
625    pod_cpus [0]=00000001 [1]=00000002 [2]=00000004 [3]=00000008
626    pod_node [0]=0 [1]=0 [2]=1 [3]=1
627    cpu_pod  [0]=0 [1]=1 [2]=2 [3]=3
628
629  SMT
630    nr_pods  4
631    pod_cpus [0]=00000001 [1]=00000002 [2]=00000004 [3]=00000008
632    pod_node [0]=0 [1]=0 [2]=1 [3]=1
633    cpu_pod  [0]=0 [1]=1 [2]=2 [3]=3
634
635  CACHE (default)
636    nr_pods  2
637    pod_cpus [0]=00000003 [1]=0000000c
638    pod_node [0]=0 [1]=1
639    cpu_pod  [0]=0 [1]=0 [2]=1 [3]=1
640
641  NUMA
642    nr_pods  2
643    pod_cpus [0]=00000003 [1]=0000000c
644    pod_node [0]=0 [1]=1
645    cpu_pod  [0]=0 [1]=0 [2]=1 [3]=1
646
647  SYSTEM
648    nr_pods  1
649    pod_cpus [0]=0000000f
650    pod_node [0]=-1
651    cpu_pod  [0]=0 [1]=0 [2]=0 [3]=0
652
653  Worker Pools
654  ============
655  pool[00] ref= 1 nice=  0 idle/workers=  4/  4 cpu=  0
656  pool[01] ref= 1 nice=-20 idle/workers=  2/  2 cpu=  0
657  pool[02] ref= 1 nice=  0 idle/workers=  4/  4 cpu=  1
658  pool[03] ref= 1 nice=-20 idle/workers=  2/  2 cpu=  1
659  pool[04] ref= 1 nice=  0 idle/workers=  4/  4 cpu=  2
660  pool[05] ref= 1 nice=-20 idle/workers=  2/  2 cpu=  2
661  pool[06] ref= 1 nice=  0 idle/workers=  3/  3 cpu=  3
662  pool[07] ref= 1 nice=-20 idle/workers=  2/  2 cpu=  3
663  pool[08] ref=42 nice=  0 idle/workers=  6/  6 cpus=0000000f
664  pool[09] ref=28 nice=  0 idle/workers=  3/  3 cpus=00000003
665  pool[10] ref=28 nice=  0 idle/workers= 17/ 17 cpus=0000000c
666  pool[11] ref= 1 nice=-20 idle/workers=  1/  1 cpus=0000000f
667  pool[12] ref= 2 nice=-20 idle/workers=  1/  1 cpus=00000003
668  pool[13] ref= 2 nice=-20 idle/workers=  1/  1 cpus=0000000c
669
670  Workqueue CPU -> pool
671  =====================
672  [    workqueue \ CPU              0  1  2  3 dfl]
673  events                   percpu   0  2  4  6
674  events_highpri           percpu   1  3  5  7
675  events_long              percpu   0  2  4  6
676  events_unbound           unbound  9  9 10 10  8
677  events_freezable         percpu   0  2  4  6
678  events_power_efficient   percpu   0  2  4  6
679  events_freezable_pwr_ef  percpu   0  2  4  6
680  rcu_gp                   percpu   0  2  4  6
681  rcu_par_gp               percpu   0  2  4  6
682  slub_flushwq             percpu   0  2  4  6
683  netns                    ordered  8  8  8  8  8
684  ...
685
686See the command's help message for more info.
687
688
689Monitoring
690==========
691
692Use tools/workqueue/wq_monitor.py to monitor workqueue operations: ::
693
694  $ tools/workqueue/wq_monitor.py events
695                              total  infl  CPUtime  CPUhog CMW/RPR  mayday rescued
696  events                      18545     0      6.1       0       5       -       -
697  events_highpri                  8     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
698  events_long                     3     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
699  events_unbound              38306     0      0.1       -       7       -       -
700  events_freezable                0     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
701  events_power_efficient      29598     0      0.2       0       0       -       -
702  events_freezable_pwr_ef        10     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
703  sock_diag_events                0     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
704
705                              total  infl  CPUtime  CPUhog CMW/RPR  mayday rescued
706  events                      18548     0      6.1       0       5       -       -
707  events_highpri                  8     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
708  events_long                     3     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
709  events_unbound              38322     0      0.1       -       7       -       -
710  events_freezable                0     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
711  events_power_efficient      29603     0      0.2       0       0       -       -
712  events_freezable_pwr_ef        10     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
713  sock_diag_events                0     0      0.0       0       0       -       -
714
715  ...
716
717See the command's help message for more info.
718
719
720Debugging
721=========
722
723Because the work functions are executed by generic worker threads
724there are a few tricks needed to shed some light on misbehaving
725workqueue users.
726
727Worker threads show up in the process list as: ::
728
729  root      5671  0.0  0.0      0     0 ?        S    12:07   0:00 [kworker/0:1]
730  root      5672  0.0  0.0      0     0 ?        S    12:07   0:00 [kworker/1:2]
731  root      5673  0.0  0.0      0     0 ?        S    12:12   0:00 [kworker/0:0]
732  root      5674  0.0  0.0      0     0 ?        S    12:13   0:00 [kworker/1:0]
733
734If kworkers are going crazy (using too much cpu), there are two types
735of possible problems:
736
737	1. Something being scheduled in rapid succession
738	2. A single work item that consumes lots of cpu cycles
739
740The first one can be tracked using tracing: ::
741
742	$ echo workqueue:workqueue_queue_work > /sys/kernel/tracing/set_event
743	$ cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace_pipe > out.txt
744	(wait a few secs)
745	^C
746
747If something is busy looping on work queueing, it would be dominating
748the output and the offender can be determined with the work item
749function.
750
751For the second type of problems it should be possible to just check
752the stack trace of the offending worker thread. ::
753
754	$ cat /proc/THE_OFFENDING_KWORKER/stack
755
756The work item's function should be trivially visible in the stack
757trace.
758
759
760Non-reentrance Conditions
761=========================
762
763Workqueue guarantees that a work item cannot be re-entrant if the following
764conditions hold after a work item gets queued:
765
766        1. The work function hasn't been changed.
767        2. No one queues the work item to another workqueue.
768        3. The work item hasn't been reinitiated.
769
770In other words, if the above conditions hold, the work item is guaranteed to be
771executed by at most one worker system-wide at any given time.
772
773Note that requeuing the work item (to the same queue) in the self function
774doesn't break these conditions, so it's safe to do. Otherwise, caution is
775required when breaking the conditions inside a work function.
776
777
778Kernel Inline Documentations Reference
779======================================
780
781.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/workqueue.h
782
783.. kernel-doc:: kernel/workqueue.c
784