2011/4/1  <[email protected]>:
> The isolcpus parameter used to be a mask, but now it's a list (there are
> things called "cpusets" now as well, which are way cool but unused by us).
>  You could isolate cores 1 and 3 with "isolcpus=1,3".
>
> All that isolcpus does is to tell the Linux scheduler to not schedule any
> process on that CPU/core unless the process specifically requests to be
> put there.

And how does EMC happen to get access to that isolated core?
According to Your argument, there must be some code, which requests that.
I did the "isolcpus" tweak and disabled hyperthreading on D525 board,
but I do not recall changing anything with EMC, so my conclusion is
that EMC does that by default. Is that correct?

Viesturs

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