Thursday, July 17, 2008

RHEL 5.2 and HPC performance hints

Building on the SLES 10 sp2 kernel build post from a couple of weeks ago, we got the equivalent RHEL 5.2 page posted under the developerWorks umbrella. Mostly the same conceptual steps, but a little different in the specifics. And of course, in the RHEL 5.2 example, we reverse the example from SLES 10 by building a 4KB kernel where "normally" the RHEL 5.2 kernel is based on the 64KB pages. It's a good experiment to play with when you want to see the performance gains that emerge from leveraging larger page sizes.
We linked this in under the HPC Central wiki page where several of us are playing around with adding descriptive how-to's for HPC workloads based on practical experience.

See HPC Central, follow the link to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux page, which is where the kernel page is linked in. We plan to replicate these pieces for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server next month.

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One of many bloggers.

Bill Buros

Bill leads an IBM Linux performance team in Austin Tx (the only place really to live in Texas). The team is focused on IBM's Power offerings (old, new, and future) working with IBM's Linux Technology Center (the LTC). While the focus is primarily on Power systems, the team also analyzes and improves overall Linux performance for IBM's xSeries products (both Intel and AMD) , driving performance improvements which are both common for Linux and occasionally unique to the hardware offerings.

Performance analysis techniques, tools, and approaches are nicely common across Linux. Having worked for years in performance, there are still daily reminders of how much there is to learn in this space, so in many ways this blog is simply another vehicle in the continuing journey to becoming a more experienced "performance professional". One of several journeys in life.

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