By: Jukka Larja (roskakori2006.delete@this.gmail.com), January 22, 2020 7:30 am
Room: Moderated Discussions
Brendan (btrotter.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 21, 2020 5:04 pm wrote:
>
> Jukka Larja (roskakori2006.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 21, 2020 6:01 am wrote:
> > Brendan (btrotter.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 20, 2020 11:43 am wrote:
> > > Jukka Larja (roskakori2006.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 20, 2020 4:54 am wrote:
> > >
> > > > With oracle telling us that the end is near, these are practical approaches (not on consoles
> > > > in my opinion, but on general purpose system). Unfortunately we don't have oracle.
> > >
> > > Would you like me to write an oracle that "predicts" that a previous call to malloc()
> > > returned NULL, that a previous call to "mmap()" returned -1 (with errno set to ENOMEM),
> > > or that a previous attempt to create a new object resulted in "std::bad_alloc"?
> > >
> > > It seems to me that for all cases the oracle can be a macro that does literally nothing (or maybe
> > > just a line of white space inside a "try to allocate and free cache if you need to" wrapper).
> >
> > This is pointless. You are talking about some toy programs where freeing (some mysterious) cache can
> > be done at any point and no one will care.
>
> No, the same approach can/will work for anything that has any kind of cache, regardless of the complexity.
>
> > Any such memory in our game engine is such that it can't
> > be freed before the operation using it is done.
>
> If none of the memory can be freed because it's being used then your game engine has no cache/s.
What's the point of cache if no-one can touch it, except to free it?
> > That may be OK, if that operation itself faces OOM
> > and can abort, but that's unlikely. Much more likely the OOM will happen in some other thread. And
> > when you get one, you'll probably get several more soon. That's why the oracle is needed.
>
> You don't need an oracle to do this. E.g. you can inform other threads that they need
> to reduce the amount of memory they're currently using (and wait until the other threads
> inform you that they have); without any attempt to predict the future.
How?
> > And you are running your toy programs on some mysterious system that seems to be constantly running out
> > of memory. I mean, why else would you spend so much time trying to handle OOMs without crashing?
>
> I (try to) handle every possible problem that might happen, regardless of how likely/unlikely it is;
That's extremely stupid engineering. Seems like you have infinite programmer resources, but lacking hardware.
> Note: For previous work (operating systems) I don't even assume hardware works
> (e.g. I've probably spent 6 months just researching/prototyping "software/kernel
> based RAM fault detection and correction" for systems that don't have ECC).
You do understand how utterly irrelevant that is for current discussion, on so many levels?
> The software I'm currently working on is half "collaborate real-time editor" (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_real-time_editor
> ). Basically; users log in to the server, select a project/s they want to work on, then edit the project/s
> (while many other users may also be editing the same project/s). If the server crashes all users get annoyed
> (then probably try to reconnect before server comes back online, then realize they have no idea how long server
> will be down for and probably take a coffee break); then (after the server comes back online) all users log
> back in and have to try to figure out how much of their work was lost from which file/s, then users have to
> redo the work that was lost. If you assume (as a crude estimate for design goal purposes) there will be 100
> users and the disruption costs each user an average of 20 minutes (e.g. auto-save every modified file every
> 5 minutes); then it'd add up to about 33 hours of lost productivity, and you might be able to say it'll costs
> about $1000 each time the server crashes (despite auto-saves).
Sounds like it would be much better to spend some money on more memory than implementing crazy OOM survival strategies.
-JLarja
>
> Jukka Larja (roskakori2006.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 21, 2020 6:01 am wrote:
> > Brendan (btrotter.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 20, 2020 11:43 am wrote:
> > > Jukka Larja (roskakori2006.delete@this.gmail.com) on January 20, 2020 4:54 am wrote:
> > >
> > > > With oracle telling us that the end is near, these are practical approaches (not on consoles
> > > > in my opinion, but on general purpose system). Unfortunately we don't have oracle.
> > >
> > > Would you like me to write an oracle that "predicts" that a previous call to malloc()
> > > returned NULL, that a previous call to "mmap()" returned -1 (with errno set to ENOMEM),
> > > or that a previous attempt to create a new object resulted in "std::bad_alloc"?
> > >
> > > It seems to me that for all cases the oracle can be a macro that does literally nothing (or maybe
> > > just a line of white space inside a "try to allocate and free cache if you need to" wrapper).
> >
> > This is pointless. You are talking about some toy programs where freeing (some mysterious) cache can
> > be done at any point and no one will care.
>
> No, the same approach can/will work for anything that has any kind of cache, regardless of the complexity.
>
> > Any such memory in our game engine is such that it can't
> > be freed before the operation using it is done.
>
> If none of the memory can be freed because it's being used then your game engine has no cache/s.
What's the point of cache if no-one can touch it, except to free it?
> > That may be OK, if that operation itself faces OOM
> > and can abort, but that's unlikely. Much more likely the OOM will happen in some other thread. And
> > when you get one, you'll probably get several more soon. That's why the oracle is needed.
>
> You don't need an oracle to do this. E.g. you can inform other threads that they need
> to reduce the amount of memory they're currently using (and wait until the other threads
> inform you that they have); without any attempt to predict the future.
How?
> > And you are running your toy programs on some mysterious system that seems to be constantly running out
> > of memory. I mean, why else would you spend so much time trying to handle OOMs without crashing?
>
> I (try to) handle every possible problem that might happen, regardless of how likely/unlikely it is;
That's extremely stupid engineering. Seems like you have infinite programmer resources, but lacking hardware.
> Note: For previous work (operating systems) I don't even assume hardware works
> (e.g. I've probably spent 6 months just researching/prototyping "software/kernel
> based RAM fault detection and correction" for systems that don't have ECC).
You do understand how utterly irrelevant that is for current discussion, on so many levels?
> The software I'm currently working on is half "collaborate real-time editor" (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_real-time_editor
> ). Basically; users log in to the server, select a project/s they want to work on, then edit the project/s
> (while many other users may also be editing the same project/s). If the server crashes all users get annoyed
> (then probably try to reconnect before server comes back online, then realize they have no idea how long server
> will be down for and probably take a coffee break); then (after the server comes back online) all users log
> back in and have to try to figure out how much of their work was lost from which file/s, then users have to
> redo the work that was lost. If you assume (as a crude estimate for design goal purposes) there will be 100
> users and the disruption costs each user an average of 20 minutes (e.g. auto-save every modified file every
> 5 minutes); then it'd add up to about 33 hours of lost productivity, and you might be able to say it'll costs
> about $1000 each time the server crashes (despite auto-saves).
Sounds like it would be much better to spend some money on more memory than implementing crazy OOM survival strategies.
-JLarja
Topic | Posted By | Date |
---|---|---|
Nuances related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler | Beastian | 2020/01/03 12:46 PM |
Nuances related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler | Montaray Jack | 2020/01/03 01:14 PM |
Nuances related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler | Montaray Jack | 2020/01/03 01:49 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/03 07:05 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Beastian | 2020/01/04 12:03 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Malte Skarupke | 2020/01/04 12:22 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/04 01:31 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | dmcq | 2020/01/05 07:33 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | smeuletz | 2020/01/06 02:05 AM |
Do not blame others for your unfinished job | smeuletz | 2020/01/06 02:08 AM |
Where did all the experts come from? Did Linus get linked? (NT) | anon | 2020/01/06 04:27 AM |
Phoronix | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/06 05:04 AM |
Phoronix | Salvatore De Dominicis | 2020/01/06 07:59 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Chester | 2020/01/06 09:17 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | smeuletz | 2020/01/06 10:11 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Chester | 2020/01/06 10:54 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | smeuletz | 2020/01/06 11:33 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/06 12:58 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Gionatan Danti | 2020/01/06 01:13 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/06 01:28 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Gionatan Danti | 2020/01/06 01:52 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | John Scott | 2020/01/10 08:48 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | supernovas | 2020/01/10 10:01 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/10 12:45 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | GDan | 2020/04/06 03:10 AM |
Oracle | Anon3 | 2020/04/07 06:42 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | smeuletz | 2020/01/07 04:07 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/07 01:40 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Etienne | 2020/01/08 02:08 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | smeuletz | 2020/01/08 02:18 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Michael S | 2020/01/08 02:56 AM |
Not deprecating irrelevant API: sched_yield() on quantum computers? | smeuletz | 2020/01/07 04:34 AM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | magicalgoat | 2020/01/09 05:58 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/09 10:37 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Anon3 | 2020/01/10 04:40 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | rwessel | 2020/01/06 10:04 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/06 12:11 PM |
Do not blame anyone. Please give polite, constructive criticism | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/06 02:36 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Howard Chu | 2020/01/09 11:39 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/10 12:30 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | president ltd | 2020/01/04 02:44 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Jörn Engel | 2020/01/04 12:34 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Emil Briggs | 2020/01/04 01:13 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Jörn Engel | 2020/01/04 01:46 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/04 02:24 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/04 03:54 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Jörn Engel | 2020/01/05 10:21 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/05 12:42 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Jörn Engel | 2020/01/05 02:45 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/05 04:30 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Jörn Engel | 2020/01/05 07:03 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | RichardC | 2020/01/06 07:11 AM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/06 01:11 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/06 03:20 AM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | xilun | 2020/01/06 05:19 PM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Konrad Schwarz | 2020/01/13 04:36 AM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/13 04:53 AM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/13 05:36 AM |
FUTEX_LOCK_PI performance | rwessel | 2020/01/13 06:22 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | rainstar | 2020/01/04 10:58 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Charles Ellis | 2020/01/05 04:00 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Richard | 2020/01/05 09:58 AM |
It's hard to separate | Michael S | 2020/01/05 11:17 AM |
It's hard to separate | rainstared | 2020/01/06 01:52 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Kanter | 2020/01/08 09:27 AM |
It's hard to separate | Anon | 2020/01/08 09:37 PM |
It's hard to separate | none | 2020/01/08 11:50 PM |
It's hard to separate | Anon | 2020/01/09 01:41 AM |
It's hard to separate | none | 2020/01/09 03:54 AM |
It's hard to separate | gallier2 | 2020/01/09 04:19 AM |
It's hard to separate | Anon | 2020/01/09 05:12 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 05:24 AM |
It's hard to separate | gallier2 | 2020/01/09 05:58 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 07:09 AM |
It's hard to separate | gallier2 | 2020/01/09 05:42 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 04:41 AM |
It's hard to separate | Anon | 2020/01/09 05:24 AM |
It's hard to separate | gallier2 | 2020/01/09 06:07 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/09 09:27 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 10:15 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/09 10:45 AM |
It's hard to separate | Anon | 2020/01/09 11:15 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 11:51 AM |
It's hard to separate | Brett | 2020/01/09 01:49 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Brett | 2020/01/10 10:53 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/11 07:06 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Adrian | 2020/01/11 07:29 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/11 08:45 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/11 08:04 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ronald Maas | 2020/01/12 10:47 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/12 12:15 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/12 11:34 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Jose | 2020/01/13 01:23 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | gallier2 | 2020/01/13 01:42 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Jose | 2020/01/13 10:04 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/13 10:40 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/13 11:35 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/14 03:56 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Michael S | 2020/01/14 04:09 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/14 05:06 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/14 10:22 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/14 10:15 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/14 04:12 PM |
286 16 bit I/O | Tim McCaffrey | 2020/01/15 11:25 AM |
286 16 bit I/O | David Hess | 2020/01/15 09:17 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/13 11:52 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/13 12:25 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/13 06:38 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/13 07:16 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/13 07:47 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | someone | 2020/01/14 07:54 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/14 08:31 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/14 06:29 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/15 03:26 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Tim McCaffrey | 2020/01/15 11:27 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/15 02:32 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/15 03:47 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/15 04:08 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/15 05:16 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/15 05:31 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/15 06:46 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/15 07:04 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/15 09:53 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/16 07:27 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/16 08:33 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ronald Maas | 2020/01/17 12:05 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/17 08:15 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/17 02:59 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/17 07:40 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/18 08:42 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | gallier2 | 2020/01/19 08:02 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/18 07:12 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/15 09:49 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | gallier2 | 2020/01/16 12:57 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/16 02:30 AM |
IBM PC success | Etienne | 2020/01/16 06:42 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/16 07:32 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Brett | 2020/01/17 01:38 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/18 07:28 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/18 07:22 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/15 09:30 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Maxwell | 2020/01/11 09:07 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | David Hess | 2020/01/11 09:40 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Maxwell | 2020/01/11 10:08 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ricardo B | 2020/01/11 08:42 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Devin | 2020/01/12 02:13 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Ricardo B | 2020/01/12 06:46 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Anon | 2020/01/13 05:10 AM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | gallier2 | 2020/01/13 06:07 AM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Anon | 2020/01/13 07:09 AM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Ricardo B | 2020/01/13 11:48 AM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Michael S | 2020/01/13 07:40 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ronald Maas | 2020/01/13 09:44 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Anon | 2020/01/13 04:32 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | Ricardo B | 2020/01/13 11:24 AM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | rwessel | 2020/01/13 03:59 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | David Hess | 2020/01/13 07:12 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | rwessel | 2020/01/13 07:28 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | David Hess | 2020/01/13 07:51 PM |
8086 does NOT have those addressing modes | David Hess | 2020/01/13 06:55 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/11 01:26 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Brett | 2020/01/11 03:16 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/11 08:20 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Brett | 2020/01/12 01:02 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/12 10:06 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | Brett | 2020/01/12 11:02 PM |
Zilog Z8000 | James | 2020/01/13 06:12 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Adrian | 2020/01/12 12:38 AM |
PDP-11 | Michael S | 2020/01/12 02:33 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | rwessel | 2020/01/12 07:01 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Ronald Maas | 2020/01/12 11:03 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Konrad Schwarz | 2020/01/13 04:49 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Adrian | 2020/01/14 12:38 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | konrad.schwarz | 2020/01/15 05:50 AM |
Zilog Z8000 | Adrian | 2020/01/15 11:24 PM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/11 07:08 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/11 07:11 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 12:16 PM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/11 07:17 AM |
It's hard to separate | gallier2 | 2020/01/10 01:11 AM |
It's hard to separate | none | 2020/01/10 02:58 AM |
It's hard to separate | rwessel | 2020/01/09 08:00 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/09 09:10 AM |
It's hard to separate | rwessel | 2020/01/09 09:51 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/08 11:58 PM |
It's hard to separate | rwessel | 2020/01/09 07:31 AM |
It's hard to separate | Adrian | 2020/01/09 07:44 AM |
It's hard to separate | David Hess | 2020/01/09 09:37 AM |
It's hard to separate | none | 2020/01/09 10:34 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Paul A. Clayton | 2020/01/09 03:15 PM |
Yes, they are terrible (NT) | Anon | 2020/01/09 03:20 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/10 12:49 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Etienne | 2020/01/10 02:28 AM |
Are segments so bad? | gallier2 | 2020/01/10 02:37 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/10 03:19 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/10 04:27 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Etienne | 2020/01/10 04:41 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/10 03:05 AM |
Are segments so bad? | gallier2 | 2020/01/10 03:13 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon3 | 2020/01/10 11:37 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/10 11:47 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/11 01:43 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/10 06:51 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/11 01:05 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/11 08:20 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/11 10:14 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/11 09:15 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/11 11:15 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/12 04:18 AM |
Are segments so bad? | anon | 2020/01/12 12:30 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/12 10:19 PM |
the world sucks worse than you're aware of | Michael S | 2020/01/13 01:50 AM |
the world sucks worse than you're aware of | Brendan | 2020/01/13 03:56 AM |
the world sucks worse than you're aware of | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/13 04:46 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/13 07:41 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/13 08:21 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/13 09:43 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/13 01:02 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/13 01:22 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/13 02:50 PM |
actor of around 200? | Michael S | 2020/01/14 03:58 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/14 12:50 PM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Brendan | 2020/01/14 01:40 PM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 03:17 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Anon | 2020/01/15 04:43 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 05:09 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Anon | 2020/01/15 05:16 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 06:58 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Anon | 2020/01/15 09:08 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/16 04:05 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Michael S | 2020/01/15 04:48 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 05:10 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Michael S | 2020/01/15 08:13 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/15 08:46 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/15 06:08 AM |
Thanks for the info (NT) | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 07:00 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/15 12:30 PM |
OOM killer complains | Anon | 2020/01/15 12:44 PM |
OOM killer complains | anon | 2020/01/15 04:26 PM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Brendan | 2020/01/16 07:26 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/16 10:17 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/16 10:48 AM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Doug S | 2020/01/16 03:41 PM |
Not overcomitting leads to more OOMs, not less | Doug S | 2020/01/16 03:44 PM |
Are segments so bad? | rwessel | 2020/01/13 04:11 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/14 07:37 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/14 08:48 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/14 11:13 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/14 02:30 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brett | 2020/01/14 10:13 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/15 07:04 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 03:35 AM |
Specifying cost of dropping pages | Paul A. Clayton | 2020/01/13 03:00 PM |
Specifying cost of dropping pages | rwessel | 2020/01/13 04:19 PM |
Specifying cost of dropping pages | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 03:23 AM |
Are segments so bad? | anon | 2020/01/14 02:15 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/14 06:13 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/14 12:57 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/14 02:58 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 03:33 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/15 05:24 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/15 06:20 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Etienne | 2020/01/15 05:56 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/15 08:53 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/16 06:12 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/16 10:56 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/15 06:20 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/15 06:56 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/16 07:16 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/16 11:08 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/17 01:52 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/17 10:08 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/18 12:40 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/18 10:13 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/19 12:25 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brett | 2020/01/19 03:18 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brett | 2020/01/19 03:34 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/20 12:57 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/20 05:54 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/20 12:43 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/21 07:01 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/21 06:04 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/22 07:30 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/22 03:56 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/23 08:44 AM |
Are segments so bad? | rwessel | 2020/01/16 03:06 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/16 03:13 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/17 01:51 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/17 03:18 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/17 08:01 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/20 01:06 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/18 03:15 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/20 12:55 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/20 05:30 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/20 08:02 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/20 08:41 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/20 08:45 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/20 09:36 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/20 11:04 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/20 01:22 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/20 02:38 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/20 03:40 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/20 04:35 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Simon Farnsworth | 2020/01/20 05:30 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/20 05:20 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/21 05:08 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/21 06:07 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/22 01:53 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/22 04:32 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/22 07:12 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/22 04:28 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/23 07:36 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/24 07:27 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/24 10:42 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/25 02:46 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/25 08:29 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/26 11:17 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/27 07:55 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/27 04:33 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/28 06:28 AM |
DDS assets and MipMap chains | Montaray Jack | 2020/01/29 03:26 AM |
Are segments so bad? | gallier2 | 2020/01/27 03:58 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/27 06:19 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/25 03:23 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/22 05:52 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/23 01:24 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/23 05:24 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/24 12:43 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/24 04:04 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Etienne | 2020/01/24 06:10 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/23 01:48 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/23 03:48 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/23 07:38 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/23 01:29 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/23 06:08 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/24 09:51 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/23 06:02 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/24 03:57 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/01/24 04:17 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/01/24 09:23 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/02/02 10:15 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/02/03 01:47 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/02/03 02:34 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Gabriele Svelto | 2020/02/03 05:36 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon3 | 2020/02/03 08:47 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon | 2020/02/04 05:49 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/24 10:10 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/17 10:26 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/12 04:18 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/12 08:41 AM |
Are segments so bad? | rwessel | 2020/01/11 01:31 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anne O. Nymous | 2020/01/11 08:22 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Ricardo B | 2020/01/11 08:01 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/12 12:18 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Michael S | 2020/01/12 02:43 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Adrian | 2020/01/12 04:35 AM |
Are segments so bad? | Ricardo B | 2020/01/12 12:04 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Anon3 | 2020/01/12 05:52 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Brendan | 2020/01/12 09:58 PM |
Are segments so bad? | Paul A. Clayton | 2020/01/13 09:11 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | rainstared | 2020/01/06 01:43 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Foo_ | 2020/01/06 05:33 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | dmcq | 2020/01/06 06:03 AM |
changes in context | Carlie Coats | 2020/01/09 09:06 AM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | rainstar | 2020/01/09 10:16 PM |
No nuances, just buggy code (was: related to Spinlock implementation and the Linux Scheduler) | Montaray Jack | 2020/01/09 11:11 PM |
Suggested reading for the author | anon | 2020/01/04 11:16 PM |
Suggested reading for the author | ab | 2020/01/05 05:15 AM |
Looking at the other side (frequency scaling) | Chester | 2020/01/06 10:19 AM |
Looking at the other side (frequency scaling) | Foo_ | 2020/01/06 11:00 AM |
Why spinlocks were used | Foo_ | 2020/01/06 11:06 AM |
Why spinlocks were used | Jukka Larja | 2020/01/06 12:59 PM |
Why spinlocks were used | Simon Cooke | 2020/01/06 03:16 PM |
Why spinlocks were used | Rizzo | 2020/01/07 01:18 AM |
Looking at the other side (frequency scaling) | ab | 2020/01/07 01:14 AM |
Cross-platform code | Gian-Carlo Pascutto | 2020/01/06 08:00 AM |
Cross-platform code | Michael S | 2020/01/06 09:11 AM |
Cross-platform code | Gian-Carlo Pascutto | 2020/01/06 12:33 PM |
Cross-platform code | Michael S | 2020/01/06 01:59 PM |
Cross-platform code | Nksingh | 2020/01/07 12:09 AM |
Cross-platform code | Michael S | 2020/01/07 02:00 AM |
SRW lock implementation | Michael S | 2020/01/07 02:35 AM |
SRW lock implementation | Nksingh | 2020/01/09 02:17 PM |
broken URL in Linux source code | Michael S | 2020/01/14 01:56 AM |
broken URL in Linux source code | Travis Downs | 2020/01/14 10:14 AM |
broken URL in Linux source code | Michael S | 2020/01/14 10:48 AM |
broken URL in Linux source code | Travis Downs | 2020/01/14 04:43 PM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Michael S | 2020/01/14 03:07 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Travis Downs | 2020/01/14 11:06 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | gpderetta | 2020/01/15 04:28 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Travis Downs | 2020/01/15 11:16 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/15 11:20 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Travis Downs | 2020/01/15 11:35 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/16 11:24 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | Konrad Schwarz | 2020/02/05 10:19 AM |
SRW lock implementation - url broken | nksingh | 2020/02/05 02:42 PM |
Cross-platform code | Linus Torvalds | 2020/01/06 01:57 PM |