Re: aim7 scalability issue on 4 socket machine

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Fri Sep 18 2009 - 03:07:44 EST


On Fri, 18 Sep 2009 07:53:58 +0100 (BST) Hugh Dickins <hugh.dickins@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thu, 17 Sep 2009, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Fri, 18 Sep 2009 10:02:19 +0800 "Zhang, Yanmin" <yanmin_zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > So, Yanmin, please retest with http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/9/13/25
> > > > and let us know if that works as well for you - thanks.
> > > I tested Lee's patch and it does fix the issue.
>
> Thanks for checking and reporting back, Yanmin.
>
> >
> > Do we think we should cook up something for -stable?
>
> Gosh, I laughed at Lee (sorry!) for suggesting it for -stable:
> is stable really for getting a better number out of a benchmark?
>
> I'd have thought the next release is the right place for that; but
> I've no problem if you guys and the stable guys agree it's appropriate.
>
> >
> > Either this is a regression or the workload is particularly obscure.
>
> I've not cross-checked descriptions, but assume Lee was actually
> testing on exactly the same kind of upcoming Nehalem as Yanmin, and
> that machine happens to have characteristics which show up badly here.
>
> >
> > aim7 is sufficiently non-obscure to make me wonder what's happened here?
>
> Not a regression, just the onward march of new hardware, I think.
> Could easily be other such things in other places with other tests.
>

Well, it comes down to the question "what is -stable for".

If you take it as "bugfixed version of the 2.6.x kernel" then no,
speedups aren't appropriate.

If you consider -stable to be "something distros, etc will use" then
yes, perhaps we serve those consumers better by including fairly major
efficiency improvements.

I suspect most consumers of -stable would prefer the latter approach,
as long as we don't go nuts.
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