On 04/15/2015 10:48 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 03:34:20PM +0100, Mel Gorman wrote:
On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 04:27:31PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 09:15:50AM -0400, Waiman Long wrote:
I had included your patch with the 4.0 kernel and booted up a 16-socket
12-TB machine. I measured the elapsed time from the elilo prompt to the
availability of ssh login. Without the patch, the bootup time was 404s. It
was reduced to 298s with the patch. So there was about 100s reduction in
bootup time (1/4 of the total).
But you cheat! :-)
How long between power on and the elilo prompt? Do the 100 seconds
matter on that time scale?
Calling it cheating is a *bit* harsh as the POST times vary considerably
between manufacturers. While I'm interested in Waiman's answer, I'm told
that those that really care about minimising reboot times will use kexec
to avoid POST. The 100 seconds is 100 seconds, whether that is 25% in
all cases is a different matter.
Sure POST times vary, but its consistently stupid long :-) I'm forever
thinking my EX machine died because its not coming back from a power
cycle, and mine isn't really _that_ large.
I agree with that. I always complain about the long POST time of those
server machines.
As for Mel's patch, what I wanted to show is its impact on the OS bootup
part of the boot process. We have no control on how long the firmware
POST is, so there is no point in lumping them into the discussion.
Cheers,
Longman
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