Mark Lord wrote:
Arjan van de Ven wrote:
..
I listed a few;
1) it's policy 2) the memory is only needed for a short time (20
seconds or so) on
single-socket machines
3) it makes decisions on "subjective" information such as interrupt
device classes that the kernel currently just doesn't have (it could
grow that obviously), and is clearly policy information.
..
It's much more than just "policy".
Distributing IRQs across available cores is *essential* functionality,
not an optional "extra" as this would have it be.
After reading some of the replies, I installed it on my malfunctioning
64-bit
system, but discovered it does not perform nearly as well as the kernel
solution
in the 32-bit system does.
Responsiveness was jerky, and it took a long time to have any noticeable
effect.
And in the end, it still just assigned IRQs to two of the four available
cores.
Which still results in the task scheduler fighting against IRQs more
than necessary.
Much of this could be due to a slow response curve in the userspace
balancer (?),
but I have not yet examined it for such bugs. Hopefully it also is
clever enough
to mlock() itself, and to run at a low RT priority ?
It really does need to respond *quickly* to changes in IRQ load,
as otherwise I see dropouts on sound playback (let along video..) and
the like.
The vast majority of Linux machines are "single package", and this software
appears to be designed more for multi package, and doesn't do a great
job here
on the single package Intel cores I have (Core2duo, Core2quad).
..
All of which reminds me of perhaps *the* most important reason to keep
core functionality like "IRQ distribution" *inside* the kernel:
It has to pass peer review on this mailing list.
External utilities have no such accountability, and can generally just
follow the whims of their maintainers at the expense of kernel performance.
Not that this may be the case (or not) here, but..
Cheers
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