Tagged Questions

90
votes
11answers
7k views

How do I get Windows to go as fast as Linux for compiling C++?

I know this is not so much a programming question but it is relevant. I work on a fairly large cross platform project. On Windows I use VC++ 2008. On Linux I use gcc. There are around 40k files in ...
37
votes
9answers
5k views

Why is creating a new process more expensive on Windows than Linux?

I've heard that creating a new process on a Windows box is more expensive than on Linux. Is this true? Can somebody explain the technical reasons for why it's more expensive and provide any ...
36
votes
11answers
20k views

Threads vs Processes in Linux

I've recently heard a few people say that in Linux, it is almost always better to use processes instead of threads, since Linux is very efficient in handling processes, and because there are so many ...
28
votes
6answers
2k views

Is there any modern review of solutions to the 10000 client/sec problem

(Commonly called the C10K problem) Is there a more contemporary review of solutions to the c10k problem (Last updated: 2 Sept 2006), specifically focused on Linux (epoll, signalfd, eventfd, ...
18
votes
6answers
15k views

IPC performance: Named Pipe vs Socket

Everywhere seems to say named pipes are fast whereas sockets are slow for ipc. How much greater is the speed advantage of named pipes vs local sockets on linux? I would prefer to use sockets because ...
16
votes
1answer
748 views

How do 32-bit applications make system calls on 64-bit Linux?

Some (many? all?) 64-bit1 Linux distros allow running 32-bit applications by shipping parallel collections of 32-bit and 64-bit libraries (including libc). So a 32-bit application can link against ...
14
votes
6answers
639 views

200,000 images in single folder in linux, perfomance issue or not?

I have a php/mysql website with over 200,000 images in single folder (linux server). I don't think, that I will never need to see them in file explorer, instead they will be viewed on website on ...
11
votes
3answers
170 views

64-bit Linux performance issue with memset

I'm debugging an application that is running quite a bit slower when built as a 64-bit Linux ELF executable than as a 32-bit Linux ELF executable. Using Rational (IBM) Quantify, I tracked much of the ...
10
votes
4answers
293 views

Executable runs faster on Wine than Windows — why?

Solution: Apparently the culprit was the use of floor(), the performance of which turns out to be OS-dependent in glibc. This is a followup question to an earlier one: Same program faster on Linux ...
10
votes
4answers
704 views

Open-source OpenGL profiler for Linux

The title sums my question up pretty well: are there any open source OpenGL profilers for Linux? The only thing I could find was gDEBugger, but it only comes with a 7 day trial and is very much ...
9
votes
2answers
5k views

What Process is using all of my disk IO

If I use "top" I can see what CPU is busy and what process is using all of my CPU. If I use "iostat -x" I can see what drive is busy. But how do I see what process is using all of the drive's ...
8
votes
4answers
3k views

Perfmon-like for Linux?

In windows there is perfmon to monitor various performances aspects (called counters) of the system. Is there a perfmon-like for Linux? especially, in interested in... CPU usage (total/per ...
7
votes
3answers
183 views

How can I keep memory from exploding when child processes touch variable metadata?

Linux uses COW to keep memory usage low after a fork, but the way Perl 5 variables work in perl seems to defeat this optimization. For instance, for the variable: my $s = "1"; perl is really ...
7
votes
9answers
7k views

Overhead of pthread mutexes?

I'm trying to make a C++ API (for Linux and Solaris) thread-safe, so that its functions can be called from different threads without breaking internal data structures. In my current approach I'm using ...
7
votes
4answers
3k views

How to make Linux GUI “usable” when lots of disk activity is happening

If I start copying a huge file tree from one position to another or if some other process starts doing lots of disk activity, the foreground app (GUI) slows way down. For example, take a 2gb file tree ...
6
votes
2answers
186 views

Need thoughts on profiling of multi-threading in C on Linux

My application scenario is like this: I want to evaluate the performance gain one can achieve on a quad-core machine for processing the same amount of data. I have following two configurations: i) ...
6
votes
5answers
235 views

Initializing Billion Integers to value 1

What is good posix thread design to initialize billion integers using c/c++ on linux platform 8-core CPU with 32GB of DRAM? Thanks for your help.
6
votes
4answers
406 views

clone()/fork()/process creation is slow on some machines

Creating new processes is very slow on some of my machines, and not others. The machines are all similar, and some of the slow machines are running the exact same workloads on the same hardware and ...
6
votes
6answers
385 views

Impact of hundreds of idle threads

I am considering the use of potentially hundreds of threads to implement tasks that manage devices over a network. This is a C++ application running on a powerpc processor with a linux kernel. ...
6
votes
1answer
438 views

Multi-threaded random_r is slower than single threaded version

The following program is essentially the same as the one described here. When I run and compile the program using two threads (NTHREADS == 2), I get the following run times: real 0m14.120s ...
6
votes
8answers
610 views

Performance profiling on Linux

What are the best tools for profiling C/C++ applications on *nix? (I'm hoping to profile a server that is a mix of (blocking) file IO, epoll for network and fork()/execv() for some heavy lifting; but ...
6
votes
6answers
306 views

Can running 'cat' speed up subsequent file random access on a linux box?

on a linux box with plenty of memory (a few Gigs), I need to access randomly to a big file as fast as possible. I was thinking about doing a cat myfile > /dev/null before accessing it so my file ...
6
votes
5answers
531 views

How to most efficently handle large numbers of file descriptors?

There appear to be several options available to programs that handle large numbers of socket connections (such as web services, p2p systems, etc). Spawn a separate thread to handle I/O for each ...
5
votes
2answers
766 views

Storing & accessing up to 10 million files in Linux

I'm writing an app that needs to store lots of files up to approx 10 million. They are presently named with a UUID and are going to be around 4MB each but always the same size. Reading and writing ...
5
votes
5answers
564 views

Linux 2.6.31 Scheduler and Multithreaded Jobs

I run massively parallel scientific computing jobs on a shared Linux computer with 24 cores. Most of the time my jobs are capable of scaling to 24 cores when nothing else is running on this computer. ...
5
votes
4answers
992 views

Find out how much time a process is blocked waiting for I/O on Linux

Is there a vmstat type command that works per-process that allows you to see how much time a process is blocked waiting for I/O, time in kernel and user code?
5
votes
7answers
1k views

Effecient network server design examples, written in C

I am interested in learning how to write extremely efficient network server software and I don't mind getting my hands dirty with pointers, sockets and threading. I'm talking a server being able to ...
5
votes
9answers
903 views

Which resources should one monitor on a Linux server running a web-server or database

When running any kind of server under load there are several resources that one would like to monitor to make sure that the server is healthy. This is specifically true when testing the system under ...
4
votes
2answers
119 views

Low latency/high performance network (ethernet) messaging

Background I want to create a test application to test the network performance of different systems. To do this I plan to have that machine send out Ethernet frames over a private (otherwise ...
4
votes
2answers
88 views

Counting rows in a sqlite db

I have a sqlite db on an ARM embedded platform running Linux with somewhat limited resources. Storage device is a microSD card. Sqlite version is 3.7.7.1. The application accessing sqlite is written ...
4
votes
5answers
109 views

Would it be simply better to use the system's functions rather than use the language?

There are many scenarios where I've questioned PHP's performance with some of its functions, and whether I should build a complex class to handle specific things using its seemingly slow tools. For ...
4
votes
2answers
177 views

Timing Measurements of Linux kernel routine

I added some additional code to the Linux kernel (the scheduler) and now I would like to know what is the impact of this modification. For user processes I always used: ...
4
votes
12answers
568 views

How to make this sed script faster?

I have inherited this sed script snippet that attempts to remove certain empty spaces: s/[\s\t]*|/|/g s/|[\s\t]*/|/g s/[\s] *$//g s/^|/null|/g that operates on a file that is around 1Gb large. This ...
4
votes
1answer
1k views

thread performance on Linux vs. Solaris

This Linux Magazine article http://www.linux-mag.com/id/792 explains the difference in the way threads are implemented in Linux as compared to commercial Unixs such as Solaris. In summary, Linux uses ...
4
votes
3answers
949 views

How to limit I/O consumption of Python processes (possibly using ionice)?

I would like a particular set of Python subprocesses to be as low-impact as possible. I'm already using nice to help limit CPU consumption. But ideally I/O would be limited as well. (If skeptical, ...
4
votes
1answer
1k views

Linux Socket Buffer Imbalance

I have a simple scenario, where two servers are connected through a gigabit link. I run iperf on both sides to measure the throughput. What surprises me, whenever I run the traffic bidirectionally, ...
4
votes
8answers
2k views

When to build your own buffer system for I/O (C++)?

I have to deal with very large text files (2 GBs), it is mandatory to read/write them line by line. To write 23 millions of lines using ofstream is really slow so, at the beginning, I tried to speed ...
3
votes
6answers
100 views

Is it OK (performance-wise) to have hundreds or thousands of files in the same Linux directory?

It's well known that in Windows a directory with too many files will have a terrible performance when you try to open one of them. I have a program that is to execute only in Linux (currently it's on ...
3
votes
1answer
57 views

Accurate way of measuring overhead in kernel space

I recently implemented a security mechanism for Linux which hooks into system calls. Now I have to measure the overhead caused by it. The project requires to compare the execution time of typical ...
3
votes
1answer
144 views

Do fsnotify really need global list scan?

I'm studying the linux kernel code, more specifically the filesystem notifications within fs/notify/fsnotify.c ... AFAIK, each inode is now given a list of "marks", each one referencing a "group" ...
3
votes
1answer
210 views

linux perf: how to interpret and find hotspots

I tried out linux' perf utility today and am having trouble in interpreting its results. I'm used to valgrind's callgrind which is of course a totally different approach to the sampling based method ...
3
votes
2answers
183 views

Linux multicast sendto() performance degrades with local listeners

We have a "publisher" application that sends out data using multicast. The application is extremely performance sensitive (we are optimizing at the microsecond level). Applications that listen to ...
3
votes
7answers
283 views

random access of a large binary file

I have a large binary file (12G) from which I want to assemble a smaller binary file (16k) on the fly. Assume the file is on disk, and that the bytes for the smaller file are somewhat randomly ...
3
votes
2answers
262 views

The efficiency of using a pthread_rwlock when there are a lot of readers

While I am looking the man page of pthread_rwlock_unlock function, I noticed that the func will return EPERM if the calling thread does not have the ownership of a rwlock. Since the rdlock allows ...
3
votes
1answer
192 views

OpenGL full screen texture brings framerate down to 12fps

I've been grinding on this one a couple nights now, any tips would be appreicated: I installed linux (Debian) on an old laptop and have been writing an OpenGL application with it. The framerate ...
3
votes
4answers
411 views

Slowing process creation under Java?

I have a single, large heap (up to 240GB, though in the 20-40GB range for most of this phase of execution) JVM [1] running under Linux [2] on a server with 24 cores. We have tens of thousands of ...
3
votes
3answers
726 views

Will an IO blocked process show 100% CPU utilization in 'top' output?

I have an analysis that can be parallelized over a different number of processes. It is expected that things will be both IO and CPU intensive (very high throughput short-read DNA alignment if anyone ...
3
votes
3answers
336 views

Looking for an accurate way to micro benchmark small code paths written in C++ and running on Linux/OSX

I'm looking to do some very basic micro benchmarking of small code paths, such as tight loops, that I've written in C++. I'm running on Linux and OSX, and using GCC. What facilities are there for sub ...
3
votes
3answers
529 views

Improving mmap/munmap performance on MacOS X

Running the following C code (a bunch of mmaps and munmaps on a 2GB file) on a MacOS X machine seems to be dramatically slower than on a Linux one. #define BUFSZ 2000000000 static u_char buf[BUFSZ]; ...
3
votes
2answers
512 views

Can I get a faster output pipe than /dev/null?

I am running a huge task [automated translation scripted with perl + database etc.] to run for about 2 weeks non-stop. While thinking how to speed it up I saw that the translator outputs everything ...

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