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Date:      Wed, 24 May 2000 20:28:00 -0600
From:      Chuck Paterson <cp@bsdi.com>
To:        Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
Cc:        Terry Lambert <tlambert@primenet.com>, arch@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Preemptive kernel on older X86 hardware 
Message-ID:  <200005250228.UAA16415@berserker.bsdi.com>

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	We are seeing 30 clock ticks for a locked mutex
operation. Only 10 if you take out the lock for UP
systems. (hopefully I did the math right.) I just don't see how
putting a function call is going to be cheap relatively.

	Is it possible that you are hitting so many
spin locks that the function calltime gets burried.

Chuck

----- Begin Included Message -----
Date: Wed, 24 May 2000 19:08:00 -0700
From:  Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
To:  Chuck Paterson <cp@bsdi.com>
Subject:  Re: Preemptive kernel on older X86 hardware 
cc:  Terry Lambert <tlambert@primenet.com>, arch@FreeBSD.ORG

    We've had very good luck encapsulating our MP lock code in real
    honest-to-god subroutines rather then trying to make them inline
    macros.  

    On intel anyway, subroutine calls are *cheap*, especially compared
    to the overhead of a locked instruction or even an L1 cache miss.

    It's a no-brainer.

						-Matt


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