On 03/22/2010 01:23 PM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
quoted text > * Avi Kivity<avi@redhat.com> wrote:
>
>
>> IMO the reason perf is more usable than oprofile has less to do with the
>> kernel/userspace boundary and more do to with effort and attention spent on
>> the userspace/user boundary.
>>
>> [...]
>>
> If you are interested in the first-hand experience of the people who are doing
> the perf work then here it is: by far the biggest reason for perf success and
> perf usability is the integration of the user-space tooling with the
> kernel-space bits, into a single repository and project.
>
Please take a look at the kvm integration code in qemu as a fraction of
the whole code base.
quoted text > The very move you are opposing so vehemently for KVM.
>
I don't want to fracture a working community.
quoted text > Oprofile went the way you proposed, and it was a failure. It failed not
> because it was bad technology (it was pretty decent and people used it), it
> was not a failure because the wrong people worked on it (to the contrary, very
> capable people worked on it), it was a failure in hindsight because it simply
> incorrectly split into two projects which stiffled the progress of each other.
>
Every project that has some kernel footprint, except perf, is split like
that. Are they all failures?
Seems like perf is also split, with sysprof being developed outside the
kernel. Will you bring sysprof into the kernel? Will every feature be
duplicated in prof and sysprof?
--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function
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Messages in current thread:
Re: [RFC] Unify KVM kernel-space and user-space code into ... , Avi Kivity , (Mon Mar 22, 5:49 am)