Hi Experts.

Is there a kind of "official" way to set aside one of the available cores in an SMP system from the Linux OS to do deeply embedded extremely-low-latency stuff in a kind of single task "main loop" type environment ? I.e. creating a true coprocessor from an SMP hardware.

Some of the problems that come in ind here include:

- how to make the Linux initialization ignore one of the available cores or free a core later on ?
Here I found this:
http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/linux_kernel/kernel_configuration/re46.html
So using one of the four cores for special purpose in fact is viable.

 - how to have  a Linux task start the free running main loop ?

- how to assign certain interrupts to that core and have ISRs run there only dedicatedly interrupting the "main loop" and not ever being blocked by any Linux activity ?
here I found this:
https://access.redhat.com/site/solutions/15482
In fact of course the hardware defines if/how a certain Interrupt can be assigned to a certain CPU. How is this usually done when using ARM Cortex A9+ cores ?

 - what about MMU issues ?

- how to have a Linux application communicate with the non.-Linux application running on the dedicated core ?
Here I found this:
http://lwn.net/Articles/464391


For example I (e.g.) would like a (now rather cheap) standard quadcore ARM Cortex A9 processor chip and modify a Debian distribution in a way that support this stuff.

Thanks for any pointers ?

-Michael
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