Re: Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-10-03 Thread Sebastian Huber
On 30/09/16 22:45, dufa...@hda.com wrote: On Sep 30, 2016, at 08:05 , Sebastian Huber > wrote: On 30/09/16 12:35, dufa...@hda.com wrote: On Sep 30, 2016, at 01:49 , Sebastian Huber

Re: Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-09-30 Thread dufault
> On Sep 30, 2016, at 08:05 , Sebastian Huber > wrote: > > On 30/09/16 12:35, dufa...@hda.com wrote: >> >>> On Sep 30, 2016, at 01:49 , Sebastian Huber >>> >> > wrote: >>>

Re: Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-09-30 Thread Sebastian Huber
On 30/09/16 12:35, dufa...@hda.com wrote: On Sep 30, 2016, at 01:49 , Sebastian Huber > wrote: Hello Peter, On 30/09/16 00:13, Peter Dufault wrote: I’m moving an older application to 4.12 and having performance

Re: Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-09-30 Thread dufault
> On Sep 30, 2016, at 01:49 , Sebastian Huber > wrote: > > Hello Peter, > > On 30/09/16 00:13, Peter Dufault wrote: >> I’m moving an older application to 4.12 and having performance issues >> compared to “4.11” (aka “4.10.99”) from around 2012. > > what

Re: Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-09-29 Thread Sebastian Huber
Hello Peter, On 30/09/16 00:13, Peter Dufault wrote: I’m moving an older application to 4.12 and having performance issues compared to “4.11” (aka “4.10.99”) from around 2012. what do you mean with performance issues? Which 4.12 version do you use exactly? I have pthreads that are

Clarify DFLT and PRIO "wait_operation" field in rtems_monitor_task_dump() in pthreads in 4.12

2016-09-29 Thread Peter Dufault
I’m moving an older application to 4.12 and having performance issues compared to “4.11” (aka “4.10.99”) from around 2012. I have pthreads that are showing up as DFLT and PRIO in the “pthread” command in the shell. For example, here: --- [/] # pthread ID NAME CPU PRI STATE