Re: low-latency patches
george anzinger (george@mvista.com)
Mon, 08 Oct 2001 10:41:18 -0700
Helge Hafting wrote:
>
> Mike Fedyk wrote:
> >On Fri, Oct 05, 2001 at 11:46:39PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > But the next rank of applications - instrumentation, control systems,
> > > media production sytems, etc require 500-1000 usec latencies, and
> > > the group of people who require this is considerably smaller. And their
> > > requirements are quite aggressive. And maintaining that performance
> > > with either approach is a fair bit of work and impacts (by definition)
> > > the while kernel. That's all an argument for keeping it offstream.
> > >
> >
> > And exactly how is low latency going to hurt the majority?
> >
> > This reminds me of when 4GB on ia32 was enough, or 16 bit UIDs, or...
>
> Low latency wobviously won't do damage by itself. But Andrew Morton
> said it well: "And maintaining that performance
> with either approach is a fair bit of work and impacts (by definition)
> the whole kernel."
>
> I.e. it is too much work to get right (and keep right). The amount
> of developers is finite, their time can be better spent on other
> improvements. All future improvement will be harder if we also have
> to _maintain_ extreme low latency. This is not fix-it-once thing.
>
Well, no, but do we want to improve as kernel writers, or just stay
"hackers"? If low latency was a concern the same way lack of dead locks
and avoiding OOPs is today, don't you think we would be better coders?
As for me, I want to shoot for the higher goal. Even if I miss, I will
still have accomplished more than if I had shot for the mundane.
George
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