Hi David,
this is quite interesting. 

In a real-time scenario using two kernels *slows down* latency and overall 
performance here, when using many programs simultaneously, while seemingly 
increases polyphony performance at te same moment (personal impression of my 
ears - stereo horizon is enlarged). I use buffers/size/polyphony 6/384/1024, 
and 8 instances of FS.

Is this what's intended?

To me it's very important not to use a QuadCore high-end computer system - on 
such a system the kernel settings would not affect latency, I assume. I use a 
Dual-Core mid-size system ("average").

Regards
Bernd.
----- Folgende Nachricht wurde empfangen ----- 


Absender: David Henningsson 
Empfänger: fluid-dev 
Zeit: 2010-09-30, 08:12:22
Betreff: Re: [fluid-dev] Multi-kernel system test
On 2010-09-27 18:28, Bernd Casper wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm testing the activation of more than one processor kernels, at a
> Dual-Core system.
> Since I experience nothing when changing the number of kernels, could
> you please point me to what kind of improvement I should expect, by
> doing this.
> Many thanks
> Bernd.
>

I hope the gain will be less CPU usage if 1) you have a lot of voices 
and 2) you have big latency/buffer settings. How much "a lot" and "big" 
actually means would depend on your hardware. I've tested it with 
fast-render mostly, where I had one typical midi file taking 15 s to 
render with one core and 10 s to render with two cores. That was with -z 
8192 (if I ran with -z 64, there was no improvement at all).

// David
_______________________________________________
fluid-dev mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fluid-dev

Reply via email to