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Hyper-Threading Explained And Benchmarked

John Martin writes "2CPU.com has posted an updated article about Hyper-threading performance. They discuss the technology behind it, provide benchmarks, and make observations on what the future holds for hyper-threading. It's actually an easy, interesting read. Of note, they'll be publishing Part II in the near future which will detail hyper-threading performance under Linux 2.6. Hardware geeks will probably appreciate this."

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  1. SMT by Gary+Whittles · · Score: 2, Troll

    Simultaneous Multithreading (SMT) is not a new idea, although no one to my knowledge has implemented it yet. Intel just calls it "Hyperthreading"...it is essentially SMT.

    And yes, this is a very good idea. A modern superscaler out-of-order processor, like the Athlon and Pentium Pro (and later), can issue and retire multiple instructions per clock cycle. However, it can *only* do this if there is enough instruction-level parallelism (ILP). Turns out, there is not enough ILP in current programs to take full advantage of the chips processing capabilities. Issue slots and function units go unused due to dependencies in the program and cache misses that stall the processing. A typical processor can only look at about 32 instructions at a time. This is not a large enough window to execute future instructions out-of-order when such a stall occurs.

    However, 2 threads of execution will likely fill all of the issue slots. They are also independent threads of execution, so dependencies don't exist between them. This means that when the pipeline stalls due to a cache miss, the other thread can keep on retiring instructions.

    To all those saying that this is dumb, I suggest you study some modern architecture (I'm not talking about your undergrad architecture course either). A paper I read recently studied the affects of SMT on a simulated Alpha processor. The results were astounding with very little changes to the processor core. I heard that the next Alpha was slated to include SMT before Intel killed it.