When __queue_delayed_work() is called, it chooses a cpu for handling the
timer interrupt. As of today, it will pick either the cpu passed as
parameter or the last cpu used for this.
This is not good if a system does use CPU isolation, because it can take
away some valuable cpu time to:
1 - deal with the timer interrupt,
2 - schedule-out the desired task,
3 - queue work on a random workqueue, and
4 - schedule the desired task back to the cpu.
So to fix this, during __queue_delayed_work(), if cpu isolation is in
place, pick a random non-isolated cpu to handle the timer interrupt.
As an optimization, if the current cpu is not isolated, use it instead
of looking for another candidate.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Bras <leobras@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
        dwork->cpu = cpu;
        timer->expires = jiffies + delay;
 
-       if (unlikely(cpu != WORK_CPU_UNBOUND))
+       if (housekeeping_enabled(HK_TYPE_TIMER)) {
+               /* If the current cpu is a housekeeping cpu, use it. */
+               cpu = smp_processor_id();
+               if (!housekeeping_test_cpu(cpu, HK_TYPE_TIMER))
+                       cpu = housekeeping_any_cpu(HK_TYPE_TIMER);
                add_timer_on(timer, cpu);
-       else
-               add_timer(timer);
+       } else {
+               if (likely(cpu == WORK_CPU_UNBOUND))
+                       add_timer(timer);
+               else
+                       add_timer_on(timer, cpu);
+       }
 }
 
 /**