Richard Coleman wrote:
Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 03:20:03PM -0400, Richard Coleman wrote:
Kris Kennaway wrote:
On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 04:39:03PM +0200, Mikulas Patocka wrote:
I installed FreeBSD 4.9RC1 on P4 3GHz with hyperthreading and I see
drastic slowdown when kernel with hyperthreading is booted. For
example
program compilation took this time:
hyperthreading kernel, make -j 1 --- 1:09
hyperthreading kernel, make -j 2 --- 0:42
singlethreading kernel, make -j 1 --- 0:45
singlethreading kernel, make -j 2 --- 0:41
Compilation does very few system calls so when I compile with only one
process (-j 1), it should be as fast as with singlethreading
kernel. Do
you have any idea why is it so slow?
Do you realise that hyperthreading != a secret extra CPU in your
system?
Kris
I didn't see anywhere in the message where he implied that. To me,
the interesting thing is that there is such a larger difference
between the compile time for -j1 and -j2 when using hyperthreading as
compared to the difference between -j1 and -j2 for a single threaded
kernel. It's over a 50% slowdown.
Yes, that's because (as discussed in the archives) the kernel treats
it like an extra, completely decoupled physical CPU and schedules
processes on it without further consideration. This is presumably the
cause of the slowdown, because it's only efficient to use the virtual
CPU under certain workload patterns. HTT is not magic performance
beans.
Kris
Sigh. No one is claiming HTT is magic performance beans. The 50%
slowdown I'm talking about is between -j1 and -j2 BOTH ARE WHICH ARE
USING HTT.
It's just an interesting observation. That's all.
It's not interresting. It is to be expected. The only gains
one could exepect are in the case where sufficently differrent execution
units of the CPU would be used. Like for example doing floating point
vers. integer calculations. But exen then Amdahl will bite you by
the incurrend synchronisation verhead anyway..
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