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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing What does high performance computing mean? Post 302392653 by Andre_Merzky on Friday 5th of February 2010 04:28:48 AM
Old 02-05-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
HPC can mean anything you want it to be.

In general "High Performance" is relative to the state-of-the-art.

What is "High Performance" today is generally "Old Hat", 5 years from now.... Smilie
That may be true if you look only at the hardware. The other part of HPC is the software which is tweaked to actually fully use the hardware capabilities: that most people have the equevalent of a 10-year-old Supercomuter under their desk does not mean they are doing high performance computing...
 

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PMC_ENABLE(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					     PMC_ENABLE(3)

NAME
pmc_disable, pmc_enable -- administrative control of hardware performance counters LIBRARY
Performance Counters Library (libpmc, -lpmc) SYNOPSIS
#include <pmc.h> int pmc_disable(int cpu, int pmc); int pmc_enable(int cpu, int pmc); DESCRIPTION
These functions allow specific hardware performance monitoring counters in a system to be disabled and enabled administratively. The hard- ware performance counters available on each CPU are numbered using small non-negative integers, in a system dependent manner. Disabled coun- ters will not be available to applications for use. The invoking process needs to have the PRIV_PMC_MANAGE privilege to perform these operations. Function pmc_disable() disables the hardware counter numbered by argument pmc on CPU number cpu. Function pmc_enable() enables the hardware counter numbered by argument pmc on CPU number cpu. IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
Hardware PMCs that are currently in use by applications cannot be disabled. Allocation of a process scope software PMC marks all hardware PMCs in the system with the same pmc number as being in-use. RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
A call to these functions may fail with the following errors: [EBUSY] Function pmc_disable() specified a hardware PMC is currently in use. [EINVAL] Arguments cpu or pmc were invalid. [ENXIO] Argument cpu specified a disabled or absent CPU. [EPERM] The current process lacks sufficient privilege to perform this operation. SEE ALSO
pmc(3), pmc_cpuinfo(3), pmc_pmcinfo(3), hwpmc(4), pmccontrol(8), priv_check(9) BSD
September 22, 2008 BSD
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