Thanks, but I have that. What do you think those vertical bars on the graph are for? ;-) They're deviation of 5 runs. I throw away the best and worst first.
Not very good scientific practice :-)
Yes. They're all completely different architectures - there's a brief description at the top of the main page. elm3b67 should be ignored, nay thrown out of the window. It's an unstable POS that randomly loses processors. I've removed it from the pages.
Looking at the other 6 kernbench graphs, I see that it also occurs for elm3b70 but no others (including elm3b6 and elm3b67). Are there any differences between the various elm3b systems that could explain this?
Use the visuals in the graph .. it's very telling. -mm is *broken*.
It may well not be the same issue as last time though, I shouldn't
have jumped to that conclusion.
It's very hard to understand how it could be an issue on a system that doesn't have a lot of abnormally niced (i.e. non zero) tasks that are fairly active as it's now mathematically equivalent to the original in the absence of such tasks. Do these two systems have many such tasks running?
Would it be possible to get a run with the following patches backed out:
+sched-modified-nice-support-for-smp-load-balancing-fix.patch
+sched-modified-nice-support-for-smp-load-balancing-fix-fix.patch