Sponsored Content
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing IBM Hardware: Test speed of an execution core reliably. Post 302852907 by Corona688 on Thursday 12th of September 2013 03:12:05 PM
Old 09-12-2013
Multithreading does not work that way; two cores can't cooperate to run a single-threaded program faster. Single-threaded programs will run slower on machines with lots of slower cores; we've had some puzzled folks ask us why their new machines have worse single-threaded benchmarks than their old ones.

But more cores means you can run more threads or processes at once without sharing time; more total work can be accomplished in the aggregate; but a program has to be designed with this in mind (or multiple instances of it run) to take advantage of this capability.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

FTP Speed Problem on IBM P-Series equiped with AIX 5.2

Hi, We have IBM P-Series servers (P690, P650) equiped with AIX 5.2. Further we have 10/100 MB ethernet cards in P650 and 10/100/1000 MB ethernet cards in P690 servers. Servers are on a LAN connected with Cisco 3750 catalyst switch. FTP from one server to another is very slow,,,even 3-4 MB... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aqeelcu@hotmail
3 Replies

2. AIX

IBM Hardware question

I am looking to buy a 7044 - either a 170 or 270. From what I can find on web searchs the 170 is NOT upgradable to more that one CPU? Is that correct? Can I upgrade the planer on a 170 to a 270 to support multiple CPU's? Does anyone have any other suggestion for AIX hardware? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dizman67
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

speed test +20,000 file existance checks too slow

Need to make a very fast file existence checker. Passing in 20-50K num of files In the code below ${file} is a file with a listing of +20,000 files. test_speed is the script. I am commenting out the results of <time test_speed try>. The normal "test -f" is much much too slow when a system... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nullwhat
2 Replies

4. AIX

core dump generation in IBM machine

Hi, im getting a core dump file in a AIX machine while using a complex c++ program. The same program is working without any core error in another system with sun OS 5.9. The program has used structs, LL's and lots of call by references. What may be the reason. will it be a problem with the OS ? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh_kb211
3 Replies

5. Solaris

hardware test fails

Hi, I have a SunFire 280R abd when I boot it there is a hardware check running and it fails. Here is a long output of the test rsc> poweron Are you sure you want to turn your system power on (Yes/No)? yes rsc> console RSC Alert: Host System has Reset @(#)OBP 4.5.10 2002/02/11 10:39... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tex-Twil
2 Replies

6. Hardware

Hardware Correction: How to change DVD write speed

I am now on Kernel 2.6.32-26 For me 16x CD write speed is okay. I have old hardware which was able to write DVDs at 1x, back in previous linux version. Now, I dont get speed of less than 4x. Tested on k3b, xfburn, and brasero. But all start at bottom 4x write speed. k3b forced back to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: makh
0 Replies

7. AIX

New to AIX and IBM Hardware. Need some info

Hello all. I'm new to AIX and IBM hardware and I have a question around the configuration of the service processor on the power series. I need to know: 1) How do I get into the service processor from the serial console when AIX is up and running. I come from the Sun world and I tried all I know.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: glenc2004
1 Replies

8. Hardware

How to test the speed of your WIFI network?

Dear all, Would you know how to measure the max speed of a WIFI connection between a router and a laptop for instance? Many thanks for your help! Regards, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: freddie50
3 Replies
multithreading_support(3)					       Coin						 multithreading_support(3)

NAME
multithreading_support - Multithreading Support in Coin The support in Coin for using multiple threads in application programs and the Coin library itself, consists of two main features: o Coin provides platform-independent thread-handling abstraction classes. These are classes that the application programmer can freely use in her application code to start new threads, control their execution, work with mutexes and do other tasks related to handling multiple threads. The classes in question are SbThread, SbMutex, SbStorage, SbBarrier, SbCondVar, SbFifo, SbThreadAutoLock, SbRWMutex, and SbTypedStorage. See their respective documentation for the detailed information. The classes fully hides the system-specific implementation, which is either done on top of native Win32 (if on Microsoft Windows), or over POSIX threads (on UNIX and UNIX-like systems). o The other aspect of our multi-threading support is that Coin can be specially configured so that rendering traversals of the scene graph are done in a thread-safe manner. This means e.g. that it is possible to have Coin render the scene in parallel on multiple CPUs for multiple rendering pipes, to better take advantage of such high-end systems (like CAVE environments, for instance). Thread-safe render traversals are off by default, because there is a small overhead involved which would make rendering (very) slightly slower on single-threaded invocations. To get a Coin library built with thread-safe rendering, one must actively re-configure Coin and build a special, local version. For configure-based builds (UNIX and UNIX-like systems, or with Cygwin on Microsoft Windows) this is done with the option '--enable-threadsafe' to Autoconf configure. For how to change the configuration and re-build with Visual Studio, get in touch with us at 'coin- support@coin3d.org'. There are some restrictions and other issues which it is important to be aware of: o We do not yet provide any support for binding the multi-threaded rendering support into the SoQt / SoWin / etc GUI bindings, and neither do we provide bindings against any specific library that handles multi-pipe rendering. This means the application programmer will have to possess some expertise, and put in some effort, to be able to utilize multi-pipe rendering with Coin. o Rendering traversals is currently the only operation which we publicly support to be thread-safe. There are other aspects of Coin that we know are thread-safe, like most other action traversals beside just rendering, but we make no guarantees in this regard. o Be careful about using a separate thread for changing Coin structures versus what is used for the application's GUI event thread. We are aware of at least issues with Qt (and thereby SoQt), where you should not modify the scene graph in any way in a thread separate from the main Qt thread. This because it will trigger operations where Qt is not thread-safe. Since: Coin 2.0 Version 3.1.3 Wed May 23 2012 multithreading_support(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:13 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy