Ingo wrote:
> Could you perhaps outline two actual use-cases
> that would need two cpusets with different policies,
> on the same box?
We normally run with different policies, in the same box, on different
cpusets at the same time. But this might be because some cpusets
-need- the memory spreading, and the others that don't are left to the
default policy.
In my immediate experience, I can only outline a hypothetical case,
not an actual case, where the default node-local policy would be sorely
needed, as opposed to just preferred:
If a job were running several threads, each of which did some
file i/o in roughly equal amounts, for processing (reading and
writing) in that thread, it could need the performance that
depended on these pages being placed node local.
In cpusets running classic Unix loads, such as the daemon processes or
the login sessions, the default node-local would certainly be
preferred, as that policy is well tuned for that sort of load.
--
I won't rest till it's the best ...
Programmer, Linux Scalability
Paul Jackson <[email protected]> 1.925.600.0401
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