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Special Forums Hardware Hyperthreaded virtual cores, different C-States? Post 302922428 by agentrnge on Friday 24th of October 2014 01:54:25 PM
Old 10-24-2014
the info in cpuinfo as well as the output of turbostat shows how the virtual/logical cores relate to physical. I would expect logical core 0 and 6, on physical core 0, to have the exact same C state time/percentages. A lot of the time they are. But then sometimes not. Puzzled. Curious.

Log Phys
----------
0 0
1 1
2 2
3 3
4 4
5 5
6 0
7 1
8 2
9 3
10 4
11 5

Edit:

Speaking of linux scheduling. I have also noticed that the scheduler will sometimes put two tasks on the same physical core, but leave another physical core idle. I guess when deciding what core is most available, two virt cores might be idle, while another core is still finishing up something.. Not sure how fast load should ( if it is at all) be reballanced. Gotta break out the os internals books and refresh.

Last edited by agentrnge; 10-24-2014 at 03:08 PM..
 

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CORE(5) 						      BSD File Formats Manual							   CORE(5)

NAME
core -- memory image file format SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h> DESCRIPTION
A small number of signals which cause abnormal termination of a process also cause a record of the process's in-core state to be written to disk for later examination by one of the available debuggers. (See sigaction(2).) This memory image is written to a file named by default core.pid, where pid is the process ID of the process, in the /cores directory, provided the terminated process had write permission in the directory, and the directory existed. The maximum size of a core file is limited by setrlimit(2). Files which would be larger than the limit are not created. The core file consists of the Mach-O(5) header as described in the <mach-o/loader.h> file. The remainder of the core file consists of vari- ous sections described in the Mach-O(5) header. NOTE
Core dumps are disabled by default under Darwin/Mac OS X. To re-enable core dumps, a privileged user must do one of the following * Edit /etc/launchd.conf or $HOME/.launchd.conf and add a line specifying the limit limit core unlimited * A privileged user can also enable cores with launchctl limit core unlimited * A privileged user can also enable core files by using ulimit(1) or limit(1) depending upon the shell. SEE ALSO
gdb(1), setrlimit(2), sigaction(2), Mach-O(5), launchd.conf(5), launchd.plist(5), sysctl(8) HISTORY
A core file format appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BSD
June 26, 2008 BSD
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