X-Git-Url: http://git.megacz.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Fusers_guide%2Fusing.xml;h=d805097eca1ba54164e9894a104ab481e12569da;hb=8051f46061c7cd03f0fc327f047eb2526d00c924;hp=60b8f3effc75eefcf6151deda88f78d1dcd6ac6c;hpb=949ce3bb4ef2654a814b3549051e439daf82b5e9;p=ghc-hetmet.git diff --git a/docs/users_guide/using.xml b/docs/users_guide/using.xml index 60b8f3e..d805097 100644 --- a/docs/users_guide/using.xml +++ b/docs/users_guide/using.xml @@ -1738,7 +1738,7 @@ f "2" = 2 parallelism. - Options to enable SMP parallelism + Options for SMP parallelism In order to make use of multiple CPUs, your program must be linked with the option (see RTS option Use x simultaneous threads when running the program. Normally x - should be chosen to match the number of CPU cores on the machine. - There is no means (currently) by which this value may vary after - the program has started. - - For example, on a dual-core machine we would probably use + should be chosen to match the number of CPU cores on the + machineWhether hyperthreading cores should be counted or not is an + open question; please feel free to experiment and let us know what + results you find.. For example, + on a dual-core machine we would probably use +RTS -N2 -RTS. - Whether hyperthreading cores should be counted or not is an - open question; please feel free to experiment and let us know what - results you find. + Setting also has the effect of + setting (the number of OS threads to + use for garbage collection) to the same value. + + There is no means (currently) by which this value + may vary after the program has started. + + The following options affect the way the runtime schedules + threads on CPUs: + + + + + RTS + option + + Disable automatic migration for load balancing. + Normally the runtime will automatically try to schedule + threads across the available CPUs to make use of idle + CPUs; this option disables that behaviour. It is probably + only of use if you are explicitly scheduling threads onto + CPUs with GHC.Conc.forkOnIO. + + + + + RTS + option + + Migrate a thread to the current CPU when it is woken + up. Normally when a thread is woken up after being + blocked it will be scheduled on the CPU it was running on + last; this option allows the thread to immediately migrate + to the CPU that unblocked it. + + The rationale for allowing this eager migration is + that it tends to move threads that are communicating with + each other onto the same CPU; however there are + pathalogical situations where it turns out to be a poor + strategy. Depending on the communication pattern in your + program, it may or may not be a good idea. + + +