Too bad the performance of VT is worse in a lot of cases :/ http://www.vmware.com/pdf/asplos235_adams.pdf
Because of the way each of the 2 threads is running with just over a 50% duty cycle, assuming nothing else is using the 2 cores, Speedstep, Power Now, or Cool n' Quiet will slow down the CPU! But if you set the affinity, it will run at full clock speed.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Because of the way each of the 2 threads is running with just over a 50% duty cycle, assuming nothing else is using the 2 cores, Speedstep, Power Now, or Cool n' Quiet will slow down the CPU! But if you set the affinity, it will run at full clock speed.
Then it's a problem with how quickly Cool n' Quiet decides to turn the CPUs down not the OS scheduler or the app.
Originally posted by: Rilex
Originally posted by: Smilin
This is most obvious during guest OS setup where VM additions are not present - setup runs like crap and takes forever.![]()
That is what VT/Pacifica are for![]()
Well Cooln'Quiet is a ACPI thing, right? So even then it is still a OS issue of a different sort. But ya, disabling Cool n'Quiet is the solution to this problem, not so much setting afinity.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Well Cooln'Quiet is a ACPI thing, right? So even then it is still a OS issue of a different sort. But ya, disabling Cool n'Quiet is the solution to this problem, not so much setting afinity.
I thought it was a userland daemon (like powernowd) and if so how it does the transitions is irrelevant since it's the daemon determining when to change CPU speeds.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Well Cooln'Quiet is a ACPI thing, right? So even then it is still a OS issue of a different sort. But ya, disabling Cool n'Quiet is the solution to this problem, not so much setting afinity.
I thought it was a userland daemon (like powernowd) and if so how it does the transitions is irrelevant since it's the daemon determining when to change CPU speeds.
kernel driver/service in Windows if I remember right. Don't quote me.
