Re: binding a network card to a CPU?

Albert D. Cahalan (mark@hoist.nlcomm.com)
Wed, 21 Apr 1999 17:28:46 -0400


Hmm; here is Jeremy Allison's quote, describing something
he did with an SGI he was testing:

"Like Mindcraft, we also bound the interrupts from each network card
to a processor. This allows concurrent interrupts not to cause a
processor cache flush, which is an expensive operation."

I'm not a kernel internals genius; just trying to get a feel for
what impact these things have on system performance.

Thanks for the reply!
Mark

mark@hoist.nlcomm.com wrote:
>
> OK, after reading the Mindcraft fallout, it is interesting that
> NT can bind a network card to a particular CPU.
>
> Can Linux do this too? How would the administrator be able to balance
> the load between the two?

It is better to dynamically share the CPU. NT has shortcomings which
can be reduced a bit by that kind of tuning.

Roger.

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