I'm not sure of the context of this question, but I'll assume it isn't a
joke ;-)
I don't think this is what you are really asking, but I'll offer it up
anyway. You can bind a particular process to a particular CPU in Solaris
with pbind. It does not make for a very good simulation for the reasons
already noted. If, for whatever reason, you want to stress a particular
CPU, you might try pbind'ing several intense processes to it.
Pbind is probably more useful for diagnostics though. I recently had a
situation where we were encountering very sporadic "math errors" in one
select statement in a Pro*C program running in one 20-CPU domain on an E10K.
We isolated the problem to a hardware glitch in one particular CPU that was
returning erroneous results from one particular floating point operation -
by writing a simple Pro*C test program to loop through the select and then
pbind'ing it to each of the CPUs. All but one passed, so we blacklisted
that CPU until we could get it replaced. Hence -- "$ man pbind". You will
need the process id and the CPU id.
-Don Granaman
[certifiable OraSaurus]
----- Original Message -----
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2001 4:00 PM
> Binding processes to CPUs is not at normal,
> even in high load situations.
>
> System scheduler ticks move even busy procs
> off CPUs, to go back through the run skedder.
>
> Yes, of course, the newer/better run scheduler
> are aware of register and CPU cache flush issues,
> but there is no guarantee a processor under the
> default scheduler will own a CPU. Not at all.
>
> Of course, I could be misunderstanding what you're
> trying to test. If you're trying to run a single
> CPU benchmark, then YES, you'd want to have ONE and
> ONLY ONE processor to run it...no context switches,
> no processor swaps...just b*lls to the wall performance.
>
> But that's not real life, and should not be proferred
> as a simulation of it.
>
> hth
>
> Hannibal
>
> -----Original Message-----
> Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2001 1:41 PM
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
>
>
> Does anyone know how to pin a Solaris CPU at a high utilization? I am
doing
> some testing and want to evaluate a system under a high CPU load. Thanks.
>
> Erik
>
>
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