In my case I will still be running thousands of processes, so I have to
just teach everyone not to use top instead.
David Lang
On 18 Dec 2002, Robert Love wrote:
> Date: 18 Dec 2002 20:42:58 -0500
> From: Robert Love <rml@tech9.net>
> To: David Lang <dlang@diginsite.com>
> Cc: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com>,
> Till Immanuel Patzschke <tip@inw.de>,
> lse-tech <lse-tech@lists.sourceforge.net>,
> "linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
> Subject: Re: 15000+ processes -- poor performance ?!
>
> On Wed, 2002-12-18 at 20:20, David Lang wrote:
> > Ok, I wasn't sure of the cause, but I've seen this as far back as 2.2 I
> > had a machine trying to run 2000 processes under 2.2 and 2.4.0 (after
> > upping the 2.2 kernel limit) and top would cost me ~40% throughput on the
> > machine (while claiming it was useing ~5% of the CPU)
>
> Yah a lot of it is like William is saying... you just do not want to
> read multiple files for each process in /proc when you have a kajillion
> processes, and that is what top does. Over and over.
>
> Work has gone into 2.5 to make this a lot better.. If you use threads
> with NPTL in 2.5, a lot of this is resolved, since the sub-threads will
> not show up in as /proc/#/ entries.
>
> Robert Love
>
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