Thanks Martin and Jon for the replies.
On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 3:04 PM, Jon Nettleton jon.nettle...@gmail.comwrote:
On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 10:04 AM, Martin Abente
martin.abente.lah...@gmail.com wrote:
Are you guys still using this?
Can someone please enlighten me as to the current state
of Linux and asymmetric multiprocessing ? A number of
ARM SoCs on the market include both high performance
and low power cores.
Does Linux have a strategy for scheduling to these
asymmetric processing units yet ?
Cheers,
wad
On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 2:23 PM, John Watlington w...@laptop.org wrote:
Can someone please enlighten me as to the current state
of Linux and asymmetric multiprocessing ? A number of
ARM SoCs on the market include both high performance
and low power cores.
Does Linux have a strategy for
On Apr 30, 2012, at 9:28 AM, Peter Robinson wrote:
On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 2:23 PM, John Watlington w...@laptop.org wrote:
Can someone please enlighten me as to the current state
of Linux and asymmetric multiprocessing ? A number of
ARM SoCs on the market include both high performance
On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 2:46 PM, John Watlington w...@laptop.org wrote:
On Apr 30, 2012, at 9:28 AM, Peter Robinson wrote:
On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 2:23 PM, John Watlington w...@laptop.org wrote:
Can someone please enlighten me as to the current state
of Linux and asymmetric multiprocessing
Thanks for the pointers.
Sigh... As usual, our ability to build fun hardware has way
outpaced computer science's ability to program it outside of
simple manually partitioned examples.
Cheers,
wad
On Apr 30, 2012, at 9:53 AM, Peter Robinson wrote:
Various links below, in fact yesterday
http://wiki.laptop.org/go/OLPC_Firmware_q2f10
- many ext2, ext3, and ext4 filesystem driver fixes, #11762, #11786,
#11787, #11799, #11812, relevant if you use a USB drive or SD card
with these filesystem types,
- ASIX USB-LAN driver fixes, only relevant if you have such a device and
plan