ULE Scheduler
Momchil Ivanov
momchil at xaxo.eu
Thu Jun 14 12:39:51 UTC 2012
At Wed, 13 Jun 2012 17:49:15 +0300,
Daniel Kalchev wrote:
>
>
>
> On 12.06.12 16:08, Momchil Ivanov wrote:
> > So the L2 cache is shared between both cores and hence it's size does
> > not matter at all?
>
> If the cache is shared between both cores then it does not matter on
> which core the process runs, as long as data is in teh case. The cache
> size is irrelevant.
>
> Some CPUs have shared cache between cores, some don't. The ULE scheduler
> takes this into account, the 4BSD does not. Even if the ULE scheduler
> takes the CPU topology into consideration, if you only have two cores,
> it is almost guaranteed that processes will be switched between both,
> because the OS is running way more than two processes "at the same time".
>
> Even with more cores... it is not guaranteed an computational process
> won't be 'bouncing'. Here is an example.
> Suppose you have an 8 core (or threads) CPU. If you happen to have an
> modern Ethernet controller, like the Intel 82576 (the igb driver in
> FreeBSD), then it will use up to 8 interrupt lines, by default routing
> them each to a different core. Then, if you have heavier network
> traffic, chances are that at any given moment all 8 interrupts might be
> fired and all 8 cores switched to service network traffic -- removing
> your computational process from the running queue. The next time it
> runs, it might run on any other core, especially if the cache is not shared.
>
> Of course, if you have sufficiently large number of CPUs, you can
> configure your system so that such things do not happen, like by
> limiting the number of cores the igb driver attaches to, and have some
> of the cores dedicated to 'only' running an computational task.
>
> There is however, very little sense doing so.
OK, thank you for the explanation.
Regards,
Momchil
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