Michael Ray, Yves C. Martin
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The POWER5™ System incorporates several features designed to improve performance by eliminating bottlenecks and accelerating common functions used in operating systems. This paper discusses how two of the supported operating systems for POWER5 - AIX® and Linux™ - make use of these features to deliver improved system scalability and performance. In particular, the overheads for synchronizing translation-lookaside buffer (TLB) invalidations between processors, and for ensuring that the instruction cache is kept coherent by software, have been removed. The POWER5 simultaneous multithreading (SMT) implementation has features which allow operating systems to optimize the system for the kinds of applications being executed. We discuss how the operating systems approach the problems of scheduling tasks across the system, of determining when to switch processors between single-threaded (ST) and SMT mode, and of accounting accurately for CPU usage when in the SMT mode. © 2005 IBM.
Michael Ray, Yves C. Martin
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Zohar Feldman, Avishai Mandelbaum
WSC 2010
Israel Cidon, Leonidas Georgiadis, et al.
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking
Eric Price, David P. Woodruff
FOCS 2011