[ale] [testers wanted] schedule bigpatch (fwd)

Chris Ricker kaboom at gatech.edu
Mon Dec 7 04:25:56 EST 1998


In case any of you want to help out with the testing....

Also, there was some discussion a few months back over machines with lots of
physical memory.  There've been a lot of patches and discussions about that
in the past week or so on linux-kernel that might be worth perusing for
those of you cursed with more than 1 gig of RAM on ia32 machines.

later,
chris

--
Chris Ricker                                            kaboom at gatech.edu
                                               chris.ricker at m.cc.utah.edu

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 16:17:06 +0100 (CET)
 From: Rik van Riel <H.H.vanRiel at phys.uu.nl>
Subject: [testers wanted] schedule bigpatch

Hi,

I am currently looking for volunteers who want to evaluate
the performance of the scheduler bigpatch on LARGE multi-
user machines.

The scheduler bigpatch contains a number of items -- all of
which have proven to work stable under the most obscene
loads -- that improve the Linux scheduler with respect to
interactive respons, realtime response and overhead.

The particular feature that might contain a few performance
thingies is the improvement of interactive response. The
(often large) improvement is achieved through load-independant
'recharging' of the priorities of processes that have slept
for a period.

I have a slight suspicion that on machines where most of the
load is generated by interactive programs (100+ people reading
mail at the same time) the load-independantness might actually
degrade performance a bit compared to what it could have been
with an optimal scheduler.

Since it's all about _perceived_ performance testers don't
need to do any complicated measurements at all, just tell
me your impressions...

The scheduler bigpatch is available for kernel versions
2.1.125 to 2.1.131. If you have always been afraid of
development kernels, this is the time to make the switch
to "pre-2.2" 2.1.131, which is as stable as 2.0 will ever
be...

You don't have to be afraid about the stability of my
patch either -- it's been tested (read: severely abused
and stressed to infinity) on quite a lot of systems for
the last two months now.

You can get the patch from: http://www.phys.uu.nl/~riel/patches/

thanks,

Rik -- the flu hits, the flu hits, the flu hits -- MORE
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