Rik van Riel wrote:That may be the case, but in my opinion if this helps it doesn't "solve" the problem, because the real problem is that a process which is not on a HT is being treated as if it were.J.A. Magallón wrote:[...]
Its the same to answer 4+4 queries than 8 at half the speed, isn't it ?
That still doesn't fix the potential Linux problem that this
benchmark identified.
To clarify: I don't care as much about MySQL performance as
I care about identifying and fixing this potential bug in
Linux.
IIRC a long time ago there was a change in the scheduler to prevent a low prio task running on a sibling of a hyperthreaded processor to slow down a higher prio task on another sibling of the same processor.
Basically the scheduler would put the low prio task to sleep during an adequate task slice to allow the other sibling to run at full speed for a while.
I don't know the scheduler code well enough, but comments like this one make me think that the change is still in place:
/*
* If an SMT sibling task has been put to sleep for priority
* reasons reschedule the idle task to see if it can now run.
*/
if (rq->nr_running) {
resched_task(rq->idle);
ret = 1;
}
If that is the case, turning off CONFIG_SCHED_SMT would solve the problem.