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Date:      Wed, 17 Feb 1999 16:39:30 -0500 (EST)
From:      "John S. Dyson" <dyson@iquest.net>
To:        tlambert@primenet.com (Terry Lambert)
Cc:        dyson@iquest.net, tlambert@primenet.com, toasty@home.dragondata.com, mike@smith.net.au, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: vm_page_zero_fill
Message-ID:  <199902172139.QAA70278@y.dyson.net>
In-Reply-To: <199902171838.LAA20158@usr07.primenet.com> from Terry Lambert at "Feb 17, 99 06:38:39 pm"

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Terry Lambert said:
> > > The thing that appalled me was what you said about BSS being zero'ed
> > > in the kernel space using zeroed pages instead of as a result of an
> > > explicit zeroing by the execution class loader.
> >
> > That is the way that it works.  Explict zeroing is wasteful because
> > it cannot easily take advantage of background prezeroing...  However,
> > recently prezeroed pages make for efficient usage of cache.  The zero
> > queue (and all others) are designed to take advantage of recent cache
> > usage.
> 
> This is robbing Peter to pay Paul; in a way.  The base assumption
> that you are hiding is that you aren't constrained by memory
> bandwidth.  This isn't true if you are nearly saturating a PCI
> bus with 4 BT848's (to pick the highest memory bandwidth application
> I know about).
> 
I just realized something:

	Memory bandwidth is >> PCI bandwidth on good designs.  I believe
that the PCI and memory busses are decoupled on at least some X86 machines.

-- 
John                  | Never try to teach a pig to sing,
dyson@iquest.net      | it makes one look stupid
jdyson@nc.com         | and it irritates the pig.


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