Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> Well, my next question was going to be whether cpuset readers really
> need to exclude the writers, or whether there can be a transition
> period while the mastodon makes the change as long as it avoids stomping
> the locusts. ;-)
The mastodon's (aka mammoths ;) may make a batch of several related
changes to the cpuset configuration. What's important is that the
locusts see either none or all of the changes in a given batch, not
some intermediate inconsistent state, and that the locusts see the
change batches in the same order they were applied.
Off the top of my head, I doubt I care when the locusts see the
changes. Some delay is ok, if that's your question.
But don't try too hard to fit any work you do to cpusets. For now,
I don't plan to mess with cpuset locking anytime soon. And when I
do next, it might be that all I need to do is to change the quick
lock held by the locusts from a mutex to an ordinary rwsem, so that
multiple readers (locusts) can access the cpuset configuration in
parallel.
--
I won't rest till it's the best ...
Programmer, Linux Scalability
Paul Jackson <[email protected]> 1.925.600.0401
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