Kernel 2.6 Real-Time Benchmarks
An anonymous reader writes "This whitepaper at LinuxDevices.com includes benchmarks comparing the real-time performance of the vers. 2.4 and 2.6 linux kernels, based on LynuxWorks' BlueCat Linux 5.0 beta. The graphs compare the results for average and worst-case measurements of both interrupt response and task switch performance for the two kernels, running on a 1GHz Pentium III under relatively heavy load. Check it out -- there's an enormous improvement. The article also includes a rundown of other features of the new kernel that seem likely to be welcomed by embedded developers."
The article (Yes, I RTFA.) talks about the responsivness of the new kernel, showing dramatic improvements in active and maximum latencies. Yet at the same time, there are people working very hard on a set of 'interactivity patches' and complaining of skipping when playing music on 2.6.
I haven't followed those discussions back to the beginning, so I don't know if they're gilding the lilly. But the intense work on interactive scheduling *now* scares me about like the late work on the VM did with the 2.4.0 release.
Just like the VM was the Achilles heel of 2.4 will interactive response, particularly playing music on a system under load, be the bane of 2.6?
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.