Take a look at www.intel.com and search for Hyperthreading, should find
an article that will help...
Dont know what 'impact' you're concerned about, top will report the
two instruction units as two processors and show you what they
are doing.
Long as you run a kernel with the appropriate support in it you'll
be fine :)
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Matt_Domsch@Dell.com [mailto:Matt_Domsch@Dell.com]
> Sent: Thursday, July 18, 2002 4:01 PM
> To: RSinko@island.com; linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
> Subject: RE: Wrong CPU count
>
> > After upgrading from kernel 2.4.7-10smp to 2.4.9-34smp using
> > the Red Hat
> > RPM downloaded from RH Network, the CPU count on the machine
> > reported by
> > dmesg and listed in /proc/cpuinfo was 4 rather than the actual 2.
> >
> > This has occured on all 4 Dell 2650's that I've installed
> > this patch on. I
> > don't have any other mult-processor machines available to
> > test this with.
>
> Congratulations, you purchased a fine PowerEdge 2650 with processors which
> contain HyperThreading technology. Each physical processor appears as two
> logical processors. This behaviour is expected, and correct. :-)
-- Jack F. Vogel IBM Linux Technology Center jfv@us.ibm.com (work) || jfv@bluesong.net (home) - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/