Cc: Daniel Hazelton <dhazelton@...>, Adrian Bunk <bunk@...>, Alan Cox <alan@...>, Shawn Bohrer <shawn.bohrer@...>, Ingo Molnar <mingo@...>, Andrew Morton <akpm@...>, Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@...>, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@...>
I'm sorry but I really hope nobody shares your assumption here.
These are real customer workloads; java based "many things going on" at a time
showed several thousands of threads fin the system (a dozen or two per request, multiplied
by the number of outstanding connections) for *real customers*.
That you don't take that serious, fair, you can take serious whatever you want.
yes you did attack. But lets please use more friendly conversation here than words like
"attack". This is not a war, and we really shouldn't be hostile in this forum, neither
in words nor in intention.
What you didn't atta^Waddress was the observation that fragmentation is fundamentally unsolvable.
Yes 2.4 sucked a lot more than 2.6 does. But even 2.6 will (and does) have fragmentation issues.
We don't have effective physical address based reclaim yet for higher order allocs.
I'm sorry but I fail to entirely understand where your "So" or the rest of your
conclusion comes from in terms of "both the authors". Which part of "fewer threads" and
"8kb versus fragmentation" did you misunderstand to get to your conclusion?
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