LAM SMP performance
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Josip Loncaric josip at icase.eduFri Dec 8 15:31:47 PST 2000
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Patrick Geoffray wrote: > > On another hand, the message can be asynchronous and the > cache can be trashed on the receiving side before the user application > uses the payload. I forgot to say that this is not a "data push" situation. It is the receiver's act of picking up the payload activates the cache-to-cache transfer, because (thanks to cache snooping) the sender's CPU detects that the receiver's CPU is trying to access modified data in sender's cache. The sender's CPU signals this to the receiver (via HITM# signal line) and performs an implicit write-back of the modified data. Intel's PII manual states that "The implicit write-back is transferred directly to the initial requesting processor and snooped by the memory controller to assure that system memory has been updated." This single step gives the receiver's CPUs the sender's data, while the memory controller updates RAM. This situation is very likely when the receiver acts immediately. However, if the receiver is busy doing something else for a while and then decides to act, it could find that the sender's copy has long gone from cache to RAM. Then, the receiver would have to reload the data from RAM. Since the receiver acted so slowly, this outcome seems fair to me. BTW, since spinlocks are so fast, the probability of finding the data still in sender's cache is greater. Sincerely, Josip -- Dr. Josip Loncaric, Senior Staff Scientist mailto:josip at icase.edu ICASE, Mail Stop 132C PGP key at http://www.icase.edu./~josip/ NASA Langley Research Center mailto:j.loncaric at larc.nasa.gov Hampton, VA 23681-2199, USA Tel. +1 757 864-2192 Fax +1 757 864-6134
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