From: | Greg Stark <gsstark(at)mit(dot)edu> |
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To: | Douglas McNaught <doug(at)mcnaught(dot)org> |
Cc: | Greg Stark <gsstark(at)mit(dot)edu>, Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us>, Marko Kreen <marko(at)l-t(dot)ee>, pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Spinlocks, yet again: analysis and proposed patches |
Date: | 2005-09-13 17:11:12 |
Message-ID: | 87zmqgzydr.fsf@stark.xeocode.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
Douglas McNaught <doug(at)mcnaught(dot)org> writes:
> > It seems to me what you've found is an outright bug in the linux scheduler.
> > Perhaps posting it to linux-kernel would be worthwhile.
>
> People have complained on l-k several times about the 2.6
> sched_yield() behavior; the response has basically been "if you rely
> on any particular sched_yield() behavior for synchronization, your app
> is broken--it's not a synchronization primitive."
They're not talking about this. They're talking about applications that spin
on sched_yield() and expect it to reduce cpu load as if the process were
calling sleep().
What Tom found was that some processes are never scheduled when sched_yield is
called. There's no reason that should be happening.
--
greg
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