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author | Rickard Green <[email protected]> | 2010-06-03 12:43:57 +0000 |
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committer | Erlang/OTP <[email protected]> | 2010-06-03 12:43:57 +0000 |
commit | 97fa9fe68af5990a8ef7a71ccb7fc235d20a2c04 (patch) | |
tree | 8fbbe0bb2d4e1357b5dbf5af7e9efa2c401408d3 /erts/doc | |
parent | 8335159b919cc330e1c529464b6bbf89edbbe0a0 (diff) | |
download | otp-97fa9fe68af5990a8ef7a71ccb7fc235d20a2c04.tar.gz otp-97fa9fe68af5990a8ef7a71ccb7fc235d20a2c04.tar.bz2 otp-97fa9fe68af5990a8ef7a71ccb7fc235d20a2c04.zip |
OTP-8666 Enable automatic binding of schedulers when possible
The runtime system will by default bind schedulers to logical processors
using the default_bind bind type if the amount of schedulers are at least
equal to the amount of logical processors configured, binding of schedulers
is supported, and a CPU topology is available at startup.
NOTE: If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating system process
that binds threads to logical processors, this improves the performance of
the runtime system. However, if other operating system processes (as for
example another Erlang runtime system) also bind threads to logical
processors, there might be a performance penalty instead. If this is the
case you, are are advised to unbind the schedulers using the <seealso
marker="erl#+sbt">+sbtu</seealso> command line argument, or by invoking
<seealso
marker="erlang#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_flag(schedule
r_bind_type, unbound)</seealso>.
Diffstat (limited to 'erts/doc')
-rw-r--r-- | erts/doc/src/erl.xml | 36 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | erts/doc/src/erlang.xml | 19 |
2 files changed, 51 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml index bb741c7836..df80142ce1 100644 --- a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml +++ b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml @@ -41,6 +41,26 @@ to scroll back to text which has scrolled off the screen. The <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program must be used, however, in pipelines or if you want to redirect standard input or output.</p> + <note><p>As of ERTS version 5.8 (OTP-R14A) the runtime system will by + default bind schedulers to logical processors using the + <c>default_bind</c> bind type if the amount of schedulers are + at least equal to the amount of logical processors configured, + binding of schedulers is supported, and a CPU topology is + available at startup. + </p><p> + If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating system + process that binds threads to logical processors, this + improves the performance of the runtime system. However, + if other operating system processes (as for example + another Erlang runtime system) also bind threads to + logical processors, there might be a performance penalty + instead. If this is the case you, are are advised to + unbind the schedulers using the + <seealso marker="#+sbt">+sbtu</seealso> command line argument, + or by invoking + <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, + unbound)</seealso>.</p> + </note> </description> <funcs> <func> @@ -657,6 +677,22 @@ that the <c>+sct</c> flag may have to be passed before the <c>+sbt</c> flag on the command line (in case no CPU topology has been automatically detected).</p> + <p>The runtime system will by default bind schedulers to logical + processors using the <c>default_bind</c> bind type if the amount + of schedulers are at least equal to the amount of logical + processors configured, binding of schedulers is supported, + and a CPU topology is available at startup. + </p> + <p><em>NOTE:</em> If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating + system process that binds threads to logical processors, this + improves the performance of the runtime system. However, if other + operating system processes (as for example another Erlang runtime + system) also bind threads to logical processors, there might be a + performance penalty instead. If this is the case you, are advised + to unbind the schedulers using the <c>+sbtu</c> command line + argument, or by invoking + <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, + unbound)</seealso>.</p> <p>For more information, see <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, SchedulerBindType)</seealso>. </p> diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml b/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml index c3c0dd77d7..c8fe7b4bd2 100644 --- a/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml +++ b/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml @@ -5156,10 +5156,21 @@ true</pre> For more information on how to define the CPU topology, see <seealso marker="#system_flag_cpu_topology">erlang:system_flag(cpu_topology, CpuTopology)</seealso>. </p> - <p><em>NOTE:</em> If other programs on the system have bound - to processors, e.g. another Erlang runtime system, you - may lose performance when binding schedulers. Therefore, - schedulers are by default not bound.</p> + <p>The runtime system will by default bind schedulers to logical + processors using the <c>default_bind</c> bind type if the amount + of schedulers are at least equal to the amount of logical + processors configured, binding of schedulers is supported, + and a CPU topology is available at startup. + </p> + <p><em>NOTE:</em> If the Erlang runtime system is the only + operating system process that binds threads to logical processors, + this improves the performance of the runtime system. However, + if other operating system processes (as for example another Erlang + runtime system) also bind threads to logical processors, there + might be a performance penalty instead. If this is the case you, + are are advised to unbind the schedulers using the + <seealso marker="erl#+sbt">+sbtu</seealso> command line argument, + or <c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, unbound)</c>.</p> <p>Schedulers can be bound in different ways. The <c>How</c> argument determines how schedulers are bound. <c>How</c> can currently be one of:</p> |