--- Robert Watson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 12 Jun 2006, Danial Thom wrote: > > > first, why is the default for HZ now 1000? It > seems that 900 extra clock > > interrupts aren't a performance enhancement. > > This is a design change that is in the process > of being reconsidered. I > expect that HZ will not be 1000 in 7.x, but > can't tell you whether it will go > back to 100, or some middle ground. There are > a number of benefits to a > higher HZ, not least is more accurate timing of > some network timer events. > Since I don't have my hands in the timer code, > I can't speak to what the > decision process here is, or when any change > might happen, but I do expect to > see some change. Will anything break if I tweek this downward? > > > Running a simple test with a traffic > generator (firing udp packets to a > > blackhole), the system overhead with a single > processor goes up from 10% to > > 15% when running a kernel with SMP enabled > (and nothing else different). I > > have ITR set to 6000 interrupts per second. > That seems like an awful lot of > > overhead. Is there some problem running an > SMP-enabled kernel when only 1 > > processor is present, or is there really 50% > extra overhead on an SMP > > scheduler? I'll have a dual core in a few > days to test with. > > I don't know about the particular number, but > there is a significant overhead > to building in SMP support currently -- in > particular, you pick up a lot of > atomic instructions which increases the cost of > locking operations even > without contention. Some of that overhead > reduces as the workload goes up, as > there's coalescing of work under locked > regions, reduced context switch rates > as work is performed in batches, etc. There is > currently extremely active > work in the area of reducing the overhead of > scheduling and context switching, > being driven in part by the 32-processor > support in Sun4v. I don't expect to > see large portions of that merged to RELENG_6, > but it will be in RELENG_7. > Again, not my area of expertise, but there is > work going on in this area. > > Finally, there is a known performance problem > involving loopback network > traffic and preemption, which results in > additional context switches. You may > want to try disabling preemption and see if/how > that impacts your numbers. > There has been seen quite a bit of discussion > of this problem, and I expect to > see a solution for it in the near future. This > problem does not manifest for > remote traffic, only loopback traffic. I'm sending this traffic from an external device, receiving on an em controller with blackhole set to 1. So I assume this loopback issue doesn't apply to this test? DT __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ freebsd-performance@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-performance To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"