Re: Linux 2.6.0-test6

From: bill davidsen
Date: Sun Oct 05 2003 - 22:15:51 EST


In article <ddcbaa61f5ab6ec90c71a70bb3990b49@xxxxxxxxxx>,
Jason Munro <jason@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
| On October 2, 7:07 pm Nick Piggin <piggin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
| >
| > Pedro Larroy wrote:
| >
| > > On Thu, Oct 02, 2003 at 01:05:36PM +1000, Nick Piggin wrote:
| > > I'm afraid this selection criteria leads to a scheduler that isn't
| > > predictable for situations that aren't the ones for which is tuned to
| > > work. Of course I may be wrong, but to me, seems that saying
| > > explicitly which tasks are interactive sounds better.
| > >
| >
| > Have a look at my scheduler if you like. It won't estimate interactivity
| > but it works quite well if you nice -10 your X server. Ie. explicitly
| > state which process should be favoured.
| > http://www.kerneltrap.org/~npiggin/v15a/
|
| I don't know much about kernel internals but of the 2.5 and 2.6 kernels I
| have tried, 2.6.0-test6 is by far the best on the desktop for my use (xmms,
| vmware, firebird, loads of other apps). With this patch it's better still.
| Before patching simple things like ls or ps have an annoying slowness while
| under a moderate/heavy load. For the most part things are fine but after
| patching commands respond more quickly. This is the first time for me a
| 2.5+ kernel has been responsive enough to use on a daily basis.

I would like to add my thoughts that test6-np15a is the winner for the
things I do. I can live with a sound skip (I haven't seen any, but it's
not my test app), I really want my typing to echo, to click on a header
in Kmail and see the text, to have ls works, etc. Nick has given me that
far more than test6 plain or with -mm flavor.
--
bill davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
CTO, TMR Associates, Inc
Doing interesting things with little computers since 1979.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/