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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 0/2] Credit2: fix per-socket runqueue setup



On 09/02/2014 05:46 PM, Dario Faggioli wrote:
Me neither. BTW, on baremetal, here's what I see:
root@tg03:~# numactl --hardware
available: 2 nodes (0-1)
node 0 cpus: 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22
node 0 size: 18432 MB
node 0 free: 17927 MB
node 1 cpus: 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23
node 1 size: 18419 MB
node 1 free: 17926 MB
node distances:
node   0   1
   0:  10  20
   1:  20  10

Also:
root@tg03:~# for i in `seq 0 23`;do echo "CPU$i is on socket `cat 
/sys/bus/cpu/devices/cpu$i/topology/physical_package_id`";done
CPU0 is on socket 1
CPU1 is on socket 0
CPU2 is on socket 1
CPU3 is on socket 0
CPU4 is on socket 1
CPU5 is on socket 0
CPU6 is on socket 1
CPU7 is on socket 0
CPU8 is on socket 1
CPU9 is on socket 0
CPU10 is on socket 1
CPU11 is on socket 0
CPU12 is on socket 1
CPU13 is on socket 0
CPU14 is on socket 1
CPU15 is on socket 0
CPU16 is on socket 1
CPU17 is on socket 0
CPU18 is on socket 1
CPU19 is on socket 0
CPU20 is on socket 1
CPU21 is on socket 0
CPU22 is on socket 1
CPU23 is on socket 0

I've noticed this before, but, TBH, I never dug the cause of the
discrepancy between us and Linux.

I remember at some point Xen purposely re-enumerating the cpu numbers so that they would have a more sensible arrangement -- i.e., you could expect logical cpus on the same thread / core / socket to be grouped together consecutively.

As you can see here though, cpu 0 is still on socket 1 (which is probably why Xen keeps cpu 0 on socket 1 in its re-enumertation).

 -George

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