At the same time, I don't believe a single almighty userland policy exists, either. One might need to write or modify his program to do the best for the system anyway. Or a very simple script might just work fine.
Jun
> -----Original Message-----
> From: James Cleverdon [mailto:jamesclv@us.ibm.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2003 7:27 AM
> To: David S. Miller; akpm@digeo.com
> Cc: arjanv@redhat.com; haveblue@us.ibm.com; wli@holomorphy.com;
> pbadari@us.ibm.com; linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org; gh@us.ibm.com;
> johnstul@us.ibm.com; mannthey@us.ibm.com
> Subject: Re: userspace irq balancer
>
> On Tuesday 20 May 2003 05:22 pm, David S. Miller wrote:
> > From: Andrew Morton <akpm@digeo.com>
> > Date: Tue, 20 May 2003 02:17:12 -0700
> >
> > Concerns have been expressed that the /proc interface may be a bit
> racy.
> > One thing we do need to do is to write a /proc stresstest tool which
> > pokes numbers into the /proc files at high rates, run that under traffic
> > for a few hours.
> >
> > This issue is %100 independant of whether policy belongs in the
> > kernel or not. Also, the /proc race problem exists and should be
> > fixed regardless.
> >
> > Nobody has tried improving the current balancer.
> >
> > Policy does not belong in the kernel. I don't care what algorithm
> > people decide to use, but such decisions do NOT belong in the kernel.
>
> You keep saying that, but suppose I want to try HW IRQ balancing using the
> TPR
> registers. How could I do that from userspace? And if I could, wouldn't
> the
> benefit of real time IRQ routing be lost?
>
> It seems to me that only long term interrupt policy can be done from
> userland.
> Anything that does fast responses to fluctuating load must be inside the
> kernel.
>
> At the moment we don't do any fast IRQ policy. Even the original
> irq_balance
> only looked for idle CPUs after an interrupt was serviced. However,
> suppose
> you had a P4 with hyperthreading turned on. If an IRQ is to be delivered
> to
> the main thread but it is busy and its sibling is idle, why shouldn't we
> deliver the interrupt to the idle sibling? They both share the same
> caches,
> etc, so cache warmth isn't a problem.
>
> --
> James Cleverdon
> IBM xSeries Linux Solutions
> {jamesclv(Unix, preferred), cleverdj(Notes)} at us dot ibm dot com
>
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