On Freitag, 10. August 2007, Grant wrote:
> > > The reason I asked is that I have been running this on my AMDX2
> > > systems since it has been available with no noticeable degradation,
> > > and possibly a little better responsiveness.  I thought maybe you had
> > > some experience with it that would contradict my experiences.
> > >
> > > I always assumed that the "If unsure say no/yes" in the kernel was
> > > related to being unfamiliar with the hardware you where configuring
> > > the kernel for.
> > >
> > > That said, all I can really say is that it works for me.
> >
> > I had it 'in' once too.
> >
> > And yes, it worked. But I did not see any improvements, so I took it out.
> > I deactivate everything I do not need ...
> >
> >  The big improvements came, when I started using Ingo Molnar's cfs ;)
>
> Thanks for the info.  Running great.
>
> CFS sounds interesting.  I'm reading that will be in the main kernel
> for 2.6.23.  Still with hardened-sources-2.6.20 here, but looking
> forward to it.  Big difference?

short: yes

long answer: not in gaming (the difference in ut2004 is not very big. Maximum 
FPS are a little bit lower, minimum FPS a bit higher ... )  but everywhere 
else is. Desktop is snappier than the 'old' scheduler. Compiling stuff in the 
background? Even with PORTAGE_NICENESS=19 it was very obvious that something 
was happening. with cfs I did an emerge -e world (after switching to gcc 4.2) 
some days ago - emerge running with a niceness of 0 and most of the time I 
did not even realize that something was happening. I needed to switch to the 
vt (or use htop) to check that everything was working as it should.
 Really, from my POV cfs is just great. It does not help with 
slow-as-hell-swap but that is a completly different story.

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