Linux Today: Linux News On Internet Time.
Search Linux Today
search.internet.com
Linux News Sections:  Blog -  Developer -  High Performance -  Infrastructure -  IT Management -  Security -  Storage -
Linux Today Navigation
LT Home
Preferences
Contribute
Link to Us
Search
Linux Jobs

Become a Marketplace Partner

internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner














The Linux Channel at internet.com
Linux Today
Enterprise Linux Today
Apache Today
JustLinux.com
Linux Planet
PHPBuilder
All Linux Devices
Technology Jobs

JustTechJobs.com

LinuxToday Newsletters
Subscribe News
Subscribe PR
Subscribe Security

internet.com
IT
Developer
Internet News
Small Business
Personal Technology

Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers

 







Current Newswire:

OSI Board Addition May Bring Needed Change

Top 10 IT Billionaires -- A Closer Look

Proof Of Concept: Open-Source Multi-GPU Rendering!

How to compile the Linux kernel

Novell's Motion to Allow Evidence: SCO Opened the Door

Blake Stowell Email to Maureen O'Gara: "I Need You to Send a Jab PJ's Way"

'Rising Tide' for x86 Servers Lifting Intel, AMD

Digg Moves From MySQL to NoSQL

Elliott Associates: Novell Won't Go to Pieces

Text-to-Speech Software for Linux




Systems Engineer Sr – Automation – Opsware SAS / HP SA
Next Step Systems
US-TX-Houston

Justtechjobs.com Post A Job | Post A Resume
:The kernel column by Jon Masters #83
The kernel column by Jon Masters #83
Feb 9, 2010, 00 :03 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (2220 reads)

(Other stories by Jon Masters)

[ Thanks to Linux User & Developer magazine for this link. ]

"Last month many developers were scurrying to prepare for the 2.6.33 merge window (which we’ll cover in the next time). When they weren’t doing that, here are a few of the items that were under discussion, starting with the Big Kernel Lock. As I’ve mentioned before, one of the longer-term goals of the kernel development community is to kill off the Big Kernel Lock (BKL). This is a stayover from the early days of Linux support for SMP (support for multi-processing) in which the in-kernel locking was very coarse and under the control of a single giant ‘Big’ kernel lock. The BKL continues to exist on some level even today – previous efforts to kill it having been thwarted – and it increasingly harms larger system scalability. Jan Blunk continues his excellent work to remove the BKL from various parts of the Linux VFS (virtual file system) by pushing such use down into individual file systems, where it can then be removed slowly. He even has patches to remove the BKL from ext2 file systems entirely when used in combination with his larger overhaul."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
The kernel column #82(Dec 09, 2009)
The LKML Summary Podcast(May 06, 2009)
Video: Greg Kroah Hartman on the Linux Kernel(Oct 08, 2008)
What’s behind GregKH’s (latest) Rant?(Sep 19, 2008)
Is Linux Now a Slave to Corporate Masters?(May 01, 2008)



No talkbacks posted.
  Home | Search Talkbacks | Customize View    Top of Page  



Enter your comments below:

* Your Name:

* Your Email Address:

* Subject:

CC: [will also send this talkback to an E-Mail address]

* Comments:

Tags allowed:<I>,<B> and <U>. See our talkback-policy for more about talkback content.

Fields marked with * are required!






..............................




All times are recorded in UTC.
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Powered by Linux, Apache and PHP


The Network for Technology Professionals

Search:

About Internet.com

Legal Notices, Licensing, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
Advertise | Newsletters | E-mail Offers