Re: How to turn off hyperthreading?

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On Sat, 21 Dec 2013, david wrote:

Too, late, already have the machine with the i7. I think it only cost $15 more than the i5 option. I this particular model's i5 base processor has a lower clock rate than the i7 started with.

Just checked the BIOS. No option to turn of hyperthreading.

In linux each hyperthread is treated as another core. So if you have 4 cores, it will look like 8 with hyperthreading on. Every second cpu that linux sees is a hyperthread. so you only want cpu 0,2,4,and 6. There is a kernel command line option to have the kernel ignore some cpus, get it to ignore cpu 1,3,5 and 7. I seem to be off line right now so I can't look it up. Ah, back up.
isolcpus= cpu_number[, cpu_number,...]

The blurb for that:
"Remove the specified CPUs, as defined by the cpu_number values, from the general kernel SMP balancing and scheduler algroithms. The only way to move a process onto or off an "isolated" CPU is via the CPU affinity syscalls. cpu_number begins at 0, so the maximum value is 1 less than the number of CPUs on the system.

This option is the preferred way to isolate CPUs. The alternative, manually setting the CPU mask of all tasks in the system, can cause problems and suboptimal load balancer performance."

The place to add this to your system (if you don't want enter it every time you boot) is in GRUBs config. The best place to do this varies with the ditro. For example, I have found the best place to do this on a Ubuntu system is in /etc/default/grub.d/ as it does not interfere with upgrades.

The place you will see mentioned more often is a file called /etc/default/grub Look for a line like GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="" and edit it (as root of course) to:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="isolcpus= 1,3,5,7"

If you have more than 4 cores(6 or 8), I do not know if cpus higher than 9 are in hex or dec.

If you wish to have grub menu options to boot either way.... I would guess it is time to learn more about GRUB :) It is easy to add menu items on a static system, but gets much harder on a system with lots of updates.

Hmm, there seem to be a lot of irq options too. I wonder if they would be able to force better irq assignment within the system. I know telling the bios not to select irqs for USB gives better irq layout for me.

Anyway, the list of kernel options I based this on is from:
http://oreilly.com/linux/excerpts/9780596100797/kernel-boot-command-line-parameter-reference.html


-- Len Ovens www.ovenwerks.net


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