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Date:      Mon, 4 Oct 2010 12:18:40 -0300
From:      stephano zanzin <me@zan.st>
To:        Andre Oppermann <oppermann@networx.ch>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Very interesting paper: An Analysis of Linux Scalability to many Cores
Message-ID:  <AANLkTimBpXoXz4ZdtTK7=dLP0X0V8swpq%2Bf12bubsQRJ@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <4CA630F5.9060500@networx.ch>
References:  <4CA630F5.9060500@networx.ch>

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Very interesting! Thanks

On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 4:05 PM, Andre Oppermann <oppermann@networx.ch>wrote=
:

> Just saw the link to a very interesting paper on SMP scalability.
> A very good read and highly relevant for our efforts as well.  In
> certain areas we may already fare better, in others we still have
> some work to do.
>
> An Analysis of Linux Scalability to many Cores
>
> ABSTRACT
>  This paper analyzes the scalability of seven system applications
>  (Exim, memcached, Apache, PostgreSQL, gmake, Psearchy, and MapReduce)
>  running on Linux on a 48-core computer. Except for gmake, all
>  applications trigger scalability bottlenecks inside a recent Linux
>  kernel. Using mostly standard parallel programming techniques=97
>  this paper introduces one new technique, sloppy counters=97
>  these bottlenecks can be removed from the kernel or avoided by
>  changing the applications slightly. Modifying the kernel required
>  in total 3002 lines of code changes. A speculative conclusion from
>  this analysis is that there is no scalability reason to give up on
>  traditional operating system organizations just yet.
>
> http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/papers/linux:osdi10.pdf
>
> --
> Andre
>
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"
>



--=20
stephano



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