I don't on either the Dell or HP. I tried it on the Dells, but it
didn't do anything on one, and just moved the interrupts from CPU0 to
CPU1 on the other.
On the HP that is balancing perfectly, I don't have the irqbalance
package installed, it just worked from the get-go.
-Aaron
On 3/26/2014 12:09 PM, Mr Queue wrote:
On Wed, 26 Mar 2014 11:28:34 -0700
Aaron Seelye <aseelye-li...@eltopia.com> wrote:
My question is this, what option(s) could be present with the R710 bios
that would cause something like this to happen? If not the bios,
where/what else should I look at?
You don't have irqbalance running by chance do you? Because this sounds exactly
what it's designed to do.
https://github.com/Irqbalance/irqbalance
"Irqbalance is a daemon to help balance the cpu load generated by interrupts
across all of a systems cpus. Irqbalance identifies the highest volume
interrupt sources, and isolates them to a single unique cpu, so that load is
spread as much as possible over an entire processor set, while minimizing cache
hit rates for irq handlers."
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