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Debating the Linux Process Scheduler

An anonymous reader writes "The Linux 2.6.23 kernel is expected around the end of the month, and will be the first to include Ingo Molnar's much debated rewrite of the process scheduler called the Completely Fair Scheduler. In another Linux kernel mailing list thread one more developer is complaining about Molnar and his new code. However, according to KernelTrap a number of other Linux developers have stood up to defend Molnar and call into question the motives of the complaints. It will be interesting to see how the new processor really performs when the 2.6.23 kernel is released."

2 of 232 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Ugh bring back 2.7 please by luciofm · · Score: 5, Informative

    There was the 2.4 schuduler, the old O(1) 2.6 scheduler and now the new 2.6 CFS scheduler...
    This doenst seem to me to be ripped every 6 months, unless the 2.6 tree is just about 6 months older...

  2. Re:Can someone provide some insight? by ciroknight · · Score: 5, Informative

    Kolivas apparently publicly announced his decision to stop working on the kernel, which would include the current scheduler. That means finding another maintainer for his code, should any problems surface. If you've got 2 pieces of code that test the same in speed (as they do according to some), and 1 has a dev that's willing to keep working on it, and the other doesn't... Which would you pick?

    Wow, not even a full year has past and we're already getting revisionist historians trying to change the situation.

    Kolivas quit because of the scheduler debacle, because nobody would listen to Kolivas but were apt to follow Linus and his cronie Ingo around when they drum up more-or-less the exact same thing. Instead of critically listening to Kolivas' points, Linus and Ingo attacked Kolivas' merits. Under that kind of personal attack, I couldn't say I wouldn't have quit just to shut them up. Not all of us are stubborn mules and jackasses.

    --
    "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush