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Ars Technica on Hyperthreading 235

radiokills writes "Ars Technica has a highly-informative technical paper up on Hyper-Threading. It's a technical overview of how simultaneous multithreading works, and what problems it will introduce. It also explains why comparing the technology to SMP is Apples to Oranges, in a sense. Starting with the 3 GHz Pentium 4, this tech will be standard in Intel's desktop lines (it's already in the Xeon), so this is important stuff."
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Ars Technica on Hyperthreading

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  • by Almace ( 216500 )
    Does amd have naything similar? Dan 20sec rule.
    • Does amd have naything similar? Dan 20sec rule.

      That's odd, right about now I was thinking perhaps the limit should have been a bit higher to allow people to proofread posts a bit more.
    • Re:AMD (Score:3, Insightful)

      From http://www.hardocp.com/article.html?art=MzEw [hardocp.com] :

      As Barton and MP were mentioned, I did think to ask what [Richard Heye, AMD Vice President of Platform Engineering and Infrastructure and the Computation Products Group] thought about the threat of Intel's Hypertheading. While I see Hyperthreading as possibly becoming a very useful add-on for the Intel CPU, I can assure you that Richard Heye does not. In fact, the subject of Hyperthreading seemed to excite him. Mr. Heye explained that he had been reading papers on the subject for years and that for Intel to bring Hyperthreading to market successfully, they (Intel) were going to have to throw many more dollars at the marketing side than the development side of the issue.

    • Regardless of the technical achievments that are coming out of Intel - and hyperthreading is indeed an achievment to be applauded.. The bottom line - Intels chips have beecome totally irrelevant to me, regardless of their performance since they will contain DRM restrictions.

      I'm pinning my hopes on Apple and maybe even China's new Dragon chip for my future computing needs.
  • No (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by chainrust ( 610064 )
    I refuse to support Intel as long as they support Palladium and DRM.
  • by be-fan ( 61476 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:28PM (#4383653)
    But I'd but it gives quite a boost to interactive performance. SMP setups tend to be wonderfully responsive under background loads (much more so than the sum of the CPU speeds would suggest) so I'd guess that allowing the CPU to run more than one thread at a time would make the UI a little more responsive on single-proc machines. Now, all we need are the UNIX developers to stop being afraid of multithreading and maybe some of us UNIX users would be able to take advantage of this :0
    • SMP performance (Score:2, Informative)

      by swg101 ( 571879 )
      I would agree that a SMP system holds up well. I run 2x 200MHz Pentium Pro, and it gives solid performance as a desktop. I wonder if this tech would allow a slower clock speed chip, thus cooler, that still exhibited good performance. It seems like a good idea for laptops, etc.
      • Re:SMP performance (Score:2, Interesting)

        by FuzzyMan45 ( 451645 )
        Actually, i've used a hyper-threaded system (dual 2.0ghz xeons) and it's really not that much faster. Maybe intel fixed some stuff on the final spec, but the chips felt faster not in HT mode...
        • Re:SMP performance (Score:2, Interesting)

          by really? ( 199452 )
          ... and benchmarked a bit faster in nonHT mode for me. (FreeBSD 4.6.2, with an 8port 64 bit 3ware controller)
    • Windows 2000 became noticably more responsive when installed on a Dual Processor machine. I went from a Pentium 3 550 to a dual Pentium 3 500, and Windows/Explorer/IE etc were very enthusiastic and responsive about opening up and staying alert.

      Windows seems to be multi-threaded pretty well, at least from a UI point of view. I cannot help but feel that hyperthreading will likely have a similar result. If it does, it means Windows will behave better for the end user.

      Users often weigh performance on how fast a window pops up, not so much on how many calculations can be performed in a second.
    • SMT isn't necessarily a good idea for desktop computers, perhaps espesially from a GUI / responsiveness point of view. SMP machines don't share cache, and have problems with running thightly coupled threads, because the treads have to check the other CPU's cache when reading / writing to a (cached) shared resource. On a SMT this is not a problem, as the cache shared.

      SMP handles does a very good job of "hiding" all the processes the OS runs from a desktop user, you'll never experince slowdowns when the OS / an other app wirtes / reads from disk (if it's not because it's out of memory, and have to use the swap files...). On older systems this could be a significant problem. Playing games from cd-rom was often impossible, as the cd-rom drive used 40%-60% cpu when reading / seeking. With SMP you had another cpu to do your stuff, while the OS did it's stuff on another (not true of course, but close).

      An SMT pc woun't necessarily benefit the same way as a SMP when running such unrelated processes simultaneous, especially cache intensitive processes (cache is a shared, limited resource).

      I think SMT will benefit processor intensitve programs like simulations, and (multitreaded) games.

      If some way of restricting each process / threads use of cache isn't implemented, realtime scheduling on these processors will be all but impossible (it's rather hairy on SMP as well).

      - Ost
      • Playing games from cd-rom was often impossible, as the cd-rom drive used 40%-60% cpu when reading / seeking
        Might I suggest the use of an IDE controller that supports DMA... otherwise known as pretty much all of them since 1994...
      • as the cd-rom drive used 40%-60% cpu when reading / seeking. With SMP you had another cpu to do your stuff, while the OS did it's stuff on another (not true of course, but close).

        This really indicates poorly designed hardware missing interrupts and/or DMA. Surely SMP will help here, but an extra CPU is a high price to pay compensating for the few bucks saved by using poorly designed components for the rest of the system.

        I think HT will also help. As long as the busy CPU is busywaiting, the clever driver/OS designer could even make use of the pause instruction to reduce this virtual CPUs resource usage and thus speeding up the other virtual CPU. This means that on HT the resources wasted on busywaiting can less than on SMP.
    • by Kashif Shaikh ( 575991 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @11:38PM (#4385130)
      UNIX developers to stop being afraid of multithreading and maybe some of us UNIX users would be able to take advantage of this

      Do you know why they are afraid? In my view, threads re-introduce the problem where you have a bunch of processes that can freely share any memory at will, use any means of communication, and are a pain in the Ass with a capital A to debug/trace properly(without using internal debuggers). Try debugging a single process with dozens of different threads(i.e. threads with diff. entry points), where each thread has another dozen instances of itself. Now try using traditional debugging tools like strace,gprof(for tracing), or gdb.

      In traditional multi-process environments, multiple processes are forced to communicate using well-designed message passing interfaces(pipes, unix domain & net sockets, FIFOs, message queues, shared-memory). Sure you can use share memory, but its done in a more restricted way(you share a buffer) so that it's not abused. Badly written threads in my experience use global variables and literally hundreds of flags(i'm not joking) for communicating what to do,whats the state,etc. Debugging processes are easier IMO, because all processes can dump their core, you can pause a process in action and see exactly what its currently doing(tracing).

      I want to ramble more, but I'm tired. Anyone have more input on threads v.s processes?
      • Most of your complaints arise from bad design or poor tools. Its just as easy to make multiple threads communicate via well defined interfaces (messaging) as to make multiple processes communicate via well defined interfaces. There is the incentive to use global variables and whatnot, but that's just bad programming, and doesn't reflect on threads as a design feature. The main advantage of threads vs processes is that current APIs have a good deal of support of multithreaded programs, but not multiprocess programs. It's a lot easier to create a GUI program that handles all drawing and user-interface tasks in a seperate thread than to create a GUI program that handles these tasks in a seperate process, because the GUI toolkits have some level of support for threads.
  • by Theatetus ( 521747 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:28PM (#4383654) Journal

    Yes, but since no one has a supersentient compiler and assembler like ht requires, very few programs are able to really take advantage of this.

    I dig innovation. I dig more impressive chips. But it's getting to the point where boxes with top of the line CPUs are like those old VWs with Porsche engines in them: there comes a point when improving one part doesn't really matter any more.

    • by be-fan ( 61476 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:32PM (#4383676)
      Um, HT doesn't require supersentient compilers, it requires mildly sentient developers. Namely, developers have to make their programs multithreaded. In the Windows world, this happens already, far less so in the Linux world. Speaking of supersentient compilers, Intel C++ 6.0 supports OpenMP, even on Linux.
      • by jc42 ( 318812 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:26PM (#4383923) Homepage Journal
        > developers have to make their programs multithreaded. In the Windows world, this happens already, far less so in the Linux world.

        There's a good reason for this. The biggest problem with debugging multithreaded code is preventing the threads from shooting each other in the foot. On unix-like systems, there's a simple, elegant solution to this: processes. If you use independent processes with shared memory, you can limit the foot-shooting problems to only the shared segments, and the rest of the code is safe. You also have several kinds of inter-process communication that are easy to program and fairly failsafe.

        On Windows, you don't much have these things. Developers don't much take advantage of multiprogramming, because the inter-process communication tools are so complex. So the model is a single huge program that does everything. The natural development is toward an emacs-like system, in which everything is a module in one huge program. In such a model, it makes sense to want to use threads, so that some tasks can proceed when others are blocked.

        One way to get unix/linux developers adopt threads is making it more difficult to use the basic unix multi-processing and IPC tools. If they can be made more complex than threads, then people will adopt the Windows model.

        Alternatively, the threads library could be made as easy to use as the older unix approach. But so far, there's little sign of this happening.

        Threads are a debugging nightmare, and a programmer who has lost months trying to debug a threadized program, and finding that the end result runs even slower than the original, is going to be shy to do it again.

        Also, calling the developers dummies isn't very persuasive. They mostly hear such insults as a euphemism for "It's too complicated for your simple mind." When I hear things like that as answers to my questions, I tend to agree with my critic, and revert to things that I can understand and get to work right.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 03, 2002 @09:20PM (#4384673)
          There's a good reason for this. The biggest problem with debugging multithreaded code is preventing the threads from shooting each other in the foot.

          Yes, you have to use mutexes and other synchronization primitives to serialize (or at least de-conflict) accesses to shared data. But, there's nothing that requires you to share data between threads. In fact, a significant percentage of the data in the average multi-threaded program is not shared. No matter whether you are building an application using multiple threads or multiple processes, you still have the freedom to use whatever mix of data sharing and message passing is appropriate for your application.

          On unix-like systems, there's a simple, elegant solution to this: processes. If you use independent processes with shared memory, you can limit the foot-shooting problems to only the shared segments, and the rest of the code is safe.

          Data shared by multiple processes needs exactly the same kind of protection as data shared by multiple threads. Except that using shared memory segments requires a lot of extra book keeping and the segments aren't cleaned up if a program terminates abnormally. And obviously, no matter whether you are using multiple threads or processes, the foot shooting is limited to the shared data only.

          You also have several kinds of inter-process communication that are easy to program and fairly failsafe.

          You can communicate between threads (or even between the same thread or process and itself) using named pipes if you want. Same goes for sockets. Using a multi-process model instead of a multi-threaded model doesn't give you access to any additional mechanisms. In fact, it's much easier to build useful communications mechanisms if you're working with threads.

          On Windows, you don't much have these things. Developers don't much take advantage of multiprogramming, because the inter-process communication tools are so complex. So the model is a single huge program that does everything. The natural development is toward an emacs-like system, in which everything is a module in one huge program. In such a model, it makes sense to want to use threads, so that some tasks can proceed when others are blocked.

          In Windows, you have basically the same tools. You may not know this, but the process & thread model in Windows is virtually the same as in most modern UNIX systems. The fact that old UNIX command line tools are small and oriented around using pipes for IPC is mainly a byproduct of history & convention, if that's what you're thinking of.

          One way to get unix/linux developers adopt threads is making it more difficult to use the basic unix multi-processing and IPC tools. If they can be made more complex than threads, then people will adopt the Windows model.

          Alternatively, the threads library could be made as easy to use as the older unix approach. But so far, there's little sign of this happening.

          I would say that building applications with multiple threads is already easier than building applications with multiple processes. That has been my experience anyway.

          Threads are a debugging nightmare, and a programmer who has lost months trying to debug a threadized program, and finding that the end result runs even slower than the original, is going to be shy to do it again.

          On the contrary, debugging apps that consist of multiple processes is a nightmare. Debugging multi-threaded programs is much easier. For one thing, how many debuggers let you attach to & debug more than one process at a time in the same set of debugger windows (or at all)? Further, when you're debugging a program with multiple processes, if you signal or interrupt one process the others continue on (and vice-versa when you continue). This is rarely what you want. In general, the differences boil down to the fact that the OS & debugger coordinate & manage the execution of multiple threads within one application, while you have to do it manually if you have an application built with multiple processes. That means less work for the developer in terms of lines of code, less work in debugging, etc.

          Also, calling the developers dummies isn't very persuasive. They mostly hear such insults as a euphemism for "It's too complicated for your simple mind." When I hear things like that as answers to my questions, I tend to agree with my critic, and revert to things that I can understand and get to work right.

          The problem isn't so much that old school UNIX programmers are dumb. Mostly, they're either afraid of change or just too damn arrogant & obstinate to bother learning new technologies.

          • Debugging multi-threaded programs is much easier. For one thing, how many debuggers let you attach to & debug more than one process at a time in the same set of debugger windows (or at all)?

            Now, why on earth would you do that? The reason for putting things in separate processes is to have them separated. There is no reason to treat two entirely separate things as one. How many word processors do you see that allows you to edit two documents in the same window/pane?

        • Nah.

          Programming in threads is fine, so long as you have some ability to encapsulate your memory reliably. Doing multithreaded programming in Java is the default, and Java's strong object encapsulation and memory protection makes it quite reasonable to program with threads.

          You absolutely have to be aware of concurrency issue.. deadlock, livelock, and all that, but it's not a terribly bad burden given that you gain so much in simplicity of memory management, integrated exceptions on null pointers, etc., etc.

        • Alternatively, the threads library could be made as easy to use as the older unix approach.

          Well there are a lot of very nice wrappers out there (e.g. boost::thread, QThread and so on), plus most serious applications have their own wrappers. This is the same reason, incidentally, why developers generally don't use open(), read(), write() and creat(): that's not the level you're meant to program at. You should use stdio, sfio or iostreams instead, unless you really need the finer control.

          One real reason, I think, why we don't see more threads under Linux is that Linux doesn't support POSIX threads. The POSIX threads model is processes which have threads. Linux, on the other hand, has processes which can share address spaces, file descriptors and so on, which is not the same thing. For example, fork()ing a process in one thread and waitpid()ing on it in another thread simply doesn't work under Linux. This sort of thing makes porting POSIX-compliant multithreaded applications to Linux difficult at best.

          Note: Before anyone accuses me of FUDing, note that I'm not passing value judgements here. Linux threads might well be better than POSIX threads. As a developer, however, when I #include <pthread.h>, I expect POSIX threads, and under Linux I don't get that. It's the lie that concerns me.

          • by Anonymous Coward
            One real reason, I think, why we don't see more threads under Linux is that Linux doesn't support POSIX threads. The POSIX threads model is processes which have threads. Linux, on the other hand, has processes which can share address spaces, file descriptors and so on, which is not the same thing.

            Wrong. Linux threads are compliant with POSIX 1003.1c (and most of the common extensions). There is one exception, abeit a minor one - you can signal individual threads in Linux. The POSIX standard specifies nothing about how threads are to be mapped to processes.

            In Linux, the mapping between processes and threads is strictly one-to-one at the kernel level, although the use of thread groups makes it effectively one-to-many at the user process level. Other operating systems such as Solaris offer a many-to-many mapping with kernel light weight processes (LWPs), but it's again one-to-many at the user process level. Both implementations are about equally close to being POSIX compliant (Solaris threads aren't POSIX compliant because they don't support cancellation).

            For example, fork()ing a process in one thread and waitpid()ing on it in another thread simply doesn't work under Linux. This sort of thing makes porting POSIX-compliant multithreaded applications to Linux difficult at best.

            Not true again. In Linux 2.4, a parent process will wait on any child in the same thread group by default, unless you block SIGCHLD. In previous versions, it wasn't the default, but you could still do it. Besides, this doesn't have much to do with POSIX threads, because fork() and waitpid() aren't part of the pthreads API. fork() and waitpid() are process management functions. To create a new thread in POSIX, you use pthread_create() and to wait for one to exit you use pthread_join().

            Note: Before anyone accuses me of FUDing, note that I'm not passing value judgements here.

            Perhaps not, but you are passing bad info.

            • For those who have been following the Linux kernel development, there are two implementations trying to replace the current threads implementation, the NPTL (native posix thread library) by Ingo Molnar and Ulrich Drepper, and the NGPT (next generation posix threads) by IBM. The NPTL is a 1-1 implementation while NGPT is m-n. Based on some benchmarks it looks like NPTL is a lot faster and is being included in the 2.5 kernels (and glibc 2.3). Also, Solaris 9 has moved to a 1-1 thread implementation, so while a m-n thread implementation perhaps has some theoretical advantages it seems that it is so complex and has so much overhead that 1-1 is preferred.

              And, as the AC above already said, the POSIX thread standard leaves the choice of 1-1 or m-n up to the implementor. Which is logical, since it doesn't change the semantics of the program using pthreads.
        • I don't think you know of the newer approaches to threading technology. For starters, you can check out the scheme48 [s48.org] site. They implemented threads not by using locks but by using logging facilities, that is to say, journals. I just spent 6 months working with this way of doing things, and I can assure you one this:
          1. you cannot get deadlocks
          2. you can hardly produce lifelocks
          3. it is much faster than using shared memory
          4. the main system always has access to the memory, no need to unlock/lock/...

          There are a LOT of good reasons to use this sort of multi-threading, especially since - if correctly implemented - it requires much less memory, cpu and debugging efforts than processes or the old sort of threading model.
          • Umm, could you elaborate on this? Do you mean some kind of COW (copy-on-write) kind of stuff (i.e. MVCC in database terminology). I.e. if you write to a locked resource, a new copy of the resource is created, and when the writing is completed and noone is reading the original resource the new one is copied over the old one? I think someone was experimenting with this for the Linux kernel, they came to the conclusion that for data structures which are mostly read-only this is faster than the traditional locking approach, but if you need to write a lot, this is slower because of the overhead of copying.
      • Um, HT doesn't require supersentient compilers, it requires mildly sentient developers.
        That's not entirely true, HT is not some sort of panacea. Simply making a program multithreaded doesn't guarantee that it will be faster on HT, or even SMP. There is the very real issue of resource contention, in which case the HT system can starve itself and run slower than a non-HT system.

        In general, I think that people learning to write multithreaded code is important. In a program where there are several disjoint tasks that can run in parallel, then multithreaded code can run faster. However, I disagree when people complain that it's a matter of lazy programmers, and that if they made everything multithreaded the world would be a better place. It's not so simple.

        -J

        • True, I should have qualified this. I was mainly referring to GUI code, where there is are a whole lot of disjoint tasks that could easily be multithreaded, but generally aren't on *NIX platforms.
      • by spitzak ( 4019 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @08:01PM (#4384388) Homepage
        I would agree with the rest of the responders here that you have no idea what you are talking about.

        A correct multithreaded program is HARD!!!!! Anybody who thinks otherwise is an idiot. I have seen the results. All the systems I have seen are either broken or have so many locks in them that they may as well be single-threaded. Most Windows programmers use multithreading so that they can keep more state in local variables, which may be an ok goal but has nothing to do with speed. One of biggest buggiest programs here is a multh-threaded monstrosity written by a Windows program where there are 50 threads, ALL WAITING ON THE SAME SOCKET, and it crashes sparodically in the rare cases when two threads actually become alive at the same time. Every single rewrite to reduce the number of threads has greatly improved performance and reliability.

        I have no idea why you think GUI should be multi-threaded. GUI has no reason to be fast, computers are MUCH faster than humans, at least at drawing junk on the screen. In fact the best way to do it is pseudo-multithreading, such as the method windows uses (gasp! Fact alert: it is NOT multithreaded, only one "DispatchMessage" is running at a time!).

        I think perhaps you mean that the GUI should be running in a parallel thread with the calculations and there you have a point, however a lot of the problems are solved by deferred redraw, which the X toolkits do quite well (and in fact Windows is broken because it produes WM_PAINT events without knowing if the program has more processing to do).

        Now if there are intense calculations I grant that parallel threads are necessary, and I am working on such a program, but I must warn you that it is extremely difficult: the GUI cannot modify ANY structure being used by the parallel thread, instead it must kill the threads, wait for them to stop, modify the structure, and start them again. If in fact nothing changed you need to restart so the partially-completed answer from last time can be reused, this means you must write all the code you would for a single-threaded appliation, it does NOT save you anything. If you restart the complete parallel calculation you will get an unresponsive program if that parallel calculation takes more than a second or so. You could instead do a fancy test to see if your modifications will change the data before you kill the threads and commit them, but this often requires you to calculate the modifications twice, and the overhead of this may well kill the advantage of the parallel thread, and at least in my example this was far worse than reusing all the single-threaded restart code.

        • I have no idea why you think GUI should be multi-threaded. GUI has no reason to be fast

          Yes, it does: If you multithread it, you can e.g. show debug output, update controls and enable the user to still use the GUI. In many unix-apps your gui sort of freezes while the processes/threads are running in the background (doxygen had/still has this problem, if I remember correctly).

          the GUI cannot modify ANY structure being used by the parallel thread, instead it must kill the threads, wait for them to stop, modify the structure, and start them again

          This is not correct. It only happens when you don't know how to correctly implement a threading model, e.g. if you use journal-based threads instead of log-based you won't have any of those problems whatsoever. For example, the folks using Scheme48 [s48.org] implemented this, and it made a lot of their problems just vanish.
          • You are talking about mulththreading the calculations along with a SINGLE thread that does the GUI, which can make sense. However it seems the original poster kept saying "multihtreaded GUI" which implies to me some scheme like having each widget have it's own thread. This serves no purpose except MicroSoft uses it so that COM objects can be closed-source.

            I have no idea what you mean by "journal" or "log" based and would like an explanation.

            I am working from the assumption that threads (as opposed to processes) are taking advantage of shared memory. It seems to me that if I have a big calculation that depends on some data structure that the GUI can modify, I have to stop the calculation before I can modify the structure, and I have to inform the parallel thread that the structure has changed (in my case I decided to tell it to restart the calculation from the start, which I was calling "killing the thread" although in fact I really set a flag that makes the threads throw an exception, they then go to code that waits for the GUI to unlock them so that they can start the calculation over again, I am not really creating & destroying threads).

            Notice that in my case the threads are doing a calculation that can take several minutes, although they produce some results immediatly (a portion of an image) so the user can tell if they want to twiddle the controls some more.

            It is possible that I am confused because you are considering calculations that are done in a fraction of a second, such as parallel updating of a complex OpenGL scene. In such cases it may make sense for the GUI to wait for the previous calculation to finish before updating the structures. This should produce good results as long as it is trivial to exclude the majority of GUI events as not modifying the data structures.

            Other possibility is that you are assumming it is inexpensive to build a new data structure while keeping the old one in memory, destroying it only after the new one is built and the threads running the old one have either exited or are killed. This may be true but is certainly not in my case, where a huge savings is had by the reuse of cached information in the previous data structure.

            Although I don't know what "journal" vs "log" are but they both sound like communication pipes. Unix has had pipes since 1972 so I don't think they are a recent innovation and in fact all possible uses for them have long been explored. Basically if you are avoiding use of shared memory then you are not using threads.

        • Lock Granularity (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Ben Jackson ( 30284 )
          All the systems I have seen are either broken or have so many locks in them that they may as well be single-threaded.
          Don't you mean they had so few locks in them thay they might as well be single-threaded? Having more locks isn't a bad thing unless your critical sections have to hold more than one or two locks at a time. After all, you've got to have some kind of mutual exclusion when modifying global data, and you can only have as many threads holding locks as there are locks to hold!

          To scale well you want to lock data rather than code and that can lead to many locks when you are operating on many structures. Ideally these locks each have less contention and better data sharing than "bigger" locks.

          • Re:Lock Granularity (Score:3, Interesting)

            by spitzak ( 4019 )
            What I meant is the programs I have seen lock a piece of critical data in such a way that it is impossible for any two threads to be unlocked at any time. The code typically was like this:

            for (;;) {
            lock(big_lock_shared_by_everybody);
            figure_out_what_to_do();
            lock(small_lock_around_my_work);
            do_about_95%_of_the_work();
            unlock(big_lock_shared_by_everybody);
            do_about_5%_of_the_work();
            unlock(small_lock_around_my_work);
            do_a_bit_more_that_should_be_locked_anyway();
            &nb sp; wait_for_next_message();
            }
    • Netware 5 & 6 fully support hyper-threading.
  • by kawika ( 87069 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:32PM (#4383681)
    If you plan to use any of these features effectively on Windows you'll need to upgrade to Windows.NET Server. Windows 2000 can't distinguish between virtual and physical processors, so if the BIOS doesn't set up a two (real) CPU system the right way it will end up ignorning the second physical processor. My source:

    www.microsoft.com/windows2000/docs/hyperthreading. doc [microsoft.com]
    • by dzym ( 544085 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:54PM (#4383784) Homepage Journal
      I've also heard that a virtual processor requires its own CPU license, at least in Win2K.
      • by StonyUK ( 173886 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:36PM (#4383963)
        This is partial FUD - the document says that IF your BIOS counts processors the way Intel tell BIOS manufacurers they should, then your 4-CPU licence of 2000 server will utilize the 1st logicalCPU of each physicalCPU.

        However, it won't go on to use the extra 2nd logical CPU in each physical CPU because you've used up all your licences by then (2000 server only gives you a 4 CPU licence).

        If your BIOS doesn't enumerate CPUs the way Intel says they should, then 2000 will use both logical CPUs on the 1st and 2nd physical CPUs, and presumably leave your other two physical CPUs idle.

        In .NET, it appears that Microsoft have not only taught it how to count CPUs properly regardless of potential BIOS problems, and also decided that only physical CPUs count towards licencing (well DUH!) and so with a 4 CPU hyperthreaded system, all 8 of your logical CPUs will be used.
    • From the document:
      When examining the processor count provided by the BIOS, Windows .NET Server distinguishes between logical and physical processors, regardless of how they are counted by the BIOS. This provides a powerful advantage over Windows 2000, in that Windows .NET Server only treats physical processors as counting against the license limit. For example, if you launch Windows .NET Standard Server (2-CPU limit) on a two-way system enabled with Hyper-Threading Technology, Windows will use all four logical processors, as shown in Figure 4.
      [DIAGRAM 4]
      This example illustrates the great benefit provided by Windows .NET Server on systems enabled with Hyper-Threading Technology--customers are able to harness the processing power of four logical processors using a 2-CPU license.


      Well that's unsurprisingly lame on Microsoft's part. Basically that document says "we're too lazy to update Windows 2000 to PROPERLY recognize SMT-enabled processors, and will screw you on licensing unless you upgrade to .NET Server"

      • Well that's unsurprisingly lame on Microsoft's part.

        and exactly the same on any older linux kernel - you can't support what you don't know - prior to ev8 or p4 most kernel hackers had ever thought about "logical" processors. I'm pretty sure they could release a service pack to support hyperthreading on w2k, but they love to make money ;-)

        • 1) backporting (or if you prefer a windows term, service packs)

          2) the lame part is that you have to pay to not have to pay for your logical processors. linux doesn't have these lisensing issues.

          • 2) the lame part is that you have to pay to not have to pay for your logical processors. linux doesn't have these lisensing issues.


            yep - it might be lame to force people to buy new licenses, but hey we're free to run other operating systems and I'm sure any real microsoft zealot upgrades to .NET server years before he get's his first desktop Xeon ;-)
      • Typical Microsoft.

        This reminds me of what Microsoft did with DirectX under NT4. I had a copy of directx7 or directx8 for windows2000 beta2 and it worked fine under NT4. I finally could play other games besides quakeIII. I had a hard disk crash and had to re-install. Guess what? Microsoft updated the code to not install on n4 by defualt and they removed the old directx package! They did this to sell more copies of Windows2000. Very sleezy.

        It worked. I then paid $300 for win2000 as more and more games used directx rather then opengl. My guess is that only a single line of code was used to force users to upgrade. Same is true with the code in Windows3.1 to make sure only ms-dos was used in conjunction with it. Add a single of line coder here and there and watch consumers open their wallets.

        Linux at least does not have this problem.
    • by riiv ( 105659 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:21PM (#4383897) Homepage
      Not Quite.
      From hyperthreading.doc "Windows 2000 Server does not distinguish between physical and logical processors on systems enabled with Hyper-Threading Technology"

      Basically for 2000 family you need 2x your CPU-license limit; each virtual processor counts as a physical one.

      So A .net or newer is probably required depending on your hardware requirement. The 2000 kernel will probably not be rewritten.
    • I'm posting this on a Dell P530 development desktop, running Windows 2000 Server.
      The CPU is a single Intel Xeon 2.2 GHz.
      Hyperthreading can be turned on or off in the BIOS of the machine. I turned it on before I installed Win2K.

      The system was seen as a dual CPU machine from the time I installed it from the original CD, before I applied any service pack.

      If I disable hyperthreading in the BIOS and boot Win2K, then I only see one CPU.

      I have a second Xeon CPU on order for this machine as it is dual capable. Once I get it, it should make it look like a quad CPU in Win2K.

      FYI, I am also running another OS on the system, Warp Server for E-business with the SMP kernel. Unfortunately the OS2APIC.PSD driver only detected one CPU even with hyperthreading enabled. I contacted the OS/2 kernel developer at IBM Austin, who told me that somehow there needed to be explicit support for it in OS/2 SMP for it to work.

      I also left about 20 GB unpartitioned on my hard disk for Linux, but I haven't gotten around to installing it yet. Thread support in Linux has historically been poor and this is the main reason why I haven't done so. With the availability of the NPTL library, I'm looking forward to installing Linux, as NPTL becomes the standard pthreads library for Linux.
  • by xactoguy ( 555443 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:34PM (#4383686)
    So that's how we can put the thread through the needle even faster? Wow... back in MY day, we had to use our fingers to do that, in candle light, when you couldnt even see the friggin' hole! :P
  • by sielwolf ( 246764 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:37PM (#4383697) Homepage Journal
    I'm personally more partial to calling it Symmetric Multi-Threading as compared to Hyperthreading which is the brandname Intel created for the concept. Sort of like Xerox versus Photocopy. Of course there are some mix-ups for those who seem to think of the multi-threading as OS based and not hardware. Eh, personal preference.
    • Read the article. SMT sounds nicer, but "hyperthreading" is actually an improvement on something that's existed for ages in some traditional Unix environments: "superthreading". What should they have called it? "Superduperthreading"?

      In the historical context, the name is perfectly fitting.
  • by kin_korn_karn ( 466864 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:37PM (#4383700) Homepage
    when will someone develop a processor that will automatically multithread tasks? i.e. you don't have to explicitly ask for new threads, it optimizes the code into threads for you?

    yes, I realize this is anti-geek, so this processor would also allow you to take control of thread creation by flipping a register or something.
    • Wouldn't it be simpler and more effective if they just placed multiple processors on a single chip?
      • Note that the article mentioned that this performance increase was gained with only a 5% increase in die size. Much better than 2 entire procs (not to mention heat dissipation problems)
    • by Trepidity ( 597 ) <delirium-slashdot@@@hackish...org> on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:43PM (#4383734)
      It's incredibly difficult to automatically parellelize a program well. Even when you can run a preprocessor on it and spend days on computations; doing it in real-time in hardware is even more difficult. This is currently done to a small extent in the pipelining hardware of modern CPUs, and even that small bit of automatic parallelization is ridiculously complex and slows things down (which is why the Itanium dumped it, and put the onus on the computer to paralellize sufficiently for pipelining to work). If it's that difficult to do for the relatively meager paralellization requirements of pipelining, actually breaking the program into separate execution threads is damn near impossible with current technology (at least with any efficiency even remotely approaching writing a program to be properly multithreaded in the first place).
      • by Trepidity ( 597 )
        In reference to the Itanium's pipelining, I of course meant "put the onus on the compiler..."
    • Re:multithreading (Score:3, Informative)

      by Zathrus ( 232140 )
      Hey, if you know a new solution to deadlocks [ic.ac.uk] and race conditions [ic.ac.uk] so that it's trivially easy to solve all of them in realtime, then go talk to a processor vendor of your choice - you won't ever have to invent anything again.

      Until that happens it's simply not possible for anything but the most trivial of tasks (which is already done by compilers and processors with multiple execution units).
    • Re:multithreading (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      There almost is such a thing, at least in academia literature:

      ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/sohi/papers/2002/mssp.micr o. pdf
    • This is more of an issue of programming language support.

      There are languages (well, mostly modifications to existing languges) that allow one to create a program that will scale to any number of processors.

      It's actually a very tough problem, because most coders thing in terms of doing x, then y, then z. You really need to think in terms of I need these things done and they have these dependencies, but other than that, divide and concor any way you want.

      parallel programming languages on Google [google.com]
    • when will someone develop a processor that will automatically multithread tasks? i.e. you don't have to explicitly ask for new threads, it optimizes the code into threads for you?

      There should be no such thing as a sequential or algorithmic task. Programs should be parallel to start with. The biggest problem in software engineering is the age-old practice of using the algorithm as the basis of programming. This is the primary reason that software is so unreliable and so hard to develop. Objects in the real world are concurrent. Why should our software objects be any different?
    • Re:multithreading (Score:3, Informative)

      by iabervon ( 1971 )
      Processors do this to the extent that it's possible at runtime; that's what out-of-order execution is, basically. The problem is that it only makes your single threaded program into 2 or 3 threads; beyond that, you need to look at bigger chunks of the program than the processor ever sees at once.

      Beyond that, you really need to be able to look at the program as a whole in order to do anything that clever, so you're talking language, compiler, or library features, and you generally have to involve the programmer somewhat, although you don't necessarily have to do it as explicit threads. (E.g., there's a C variant with a keyword that says it's okay to evaluate all of the arguments to a function at the same time)
    • Your programs are already being multithreaded at a very, very low level: Out-of-order execution, nonblocking fetch, superscalar design, and so on cause your processor to be performing more than one instruction simultaneously, and I guess you can call that multithreading. A good compiler (especially on a RISC platform) can design for this automatically to a certain extent.
    • Suns MAJC (Multiprocessor Architecture for Java Computing or something like that) tried to automatically transparently split threads into multiple threads using some kind of weird speculative logic. I don't think it worked too well...

      Inicidentally, that chip was also supposed to do SMT and single-chip-SMP and SIMD. Dunno how well it faired, I kinda forgot about the chip after its second schedule slip, and I haven't seen it mentioned much since then... it should have been out for at least a year now.
  • To make optimal use of hyperthreading, I'm guessing the OS guys will have to do some work, like making sure that two threads with huge, non-overlapping data sets don't get scheduled at once, and trying to schedule threads who have overlapping datasets together. And it points out another thing. Again, just when we thought we had enough, we need MORE MEMORY BANDWIDTH. The tests show that while the dual channel RDRAM was fast enough for the two HT-enabled Xeon 2.0 GHz, it wasn't enough for the two 2.4 GHz Xeons.
  • by The Slashdolt ( 518657 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:51PM (#4383769) Homepage
    What's next, LudicrousThreads?

    obligatory spaceballs reference
  • by Perdo ( 151843 )
    They Love Hyperthreading. Licencing is determined per CPU reported to the OS not per actual piece of silicon.

    Double your licencing cost for a 5% to 30% performance improvement? I don't think so. Hyperthreading is DOA on for enterprise.

    Luckly MS has decided to enable 2 CPUs in XP home so you dont have to ante up another hundred bucks for XP professional for the 5% to 30% performance improvement.

    Junkware.
    • by MmmmAqua ( 613624 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:13PM (#4383867)
      I don't know where you're getting your info about Oracle, but it's wrong. Oracle licensing is determined per-physical CPU. This was something we made doubly-sure to check up on when migrating from our old Oracle server to our new one (dual Xeon w/HT).

      On the downside of HT, until the 2.6 (or 3.0, subject to Linus' whim) kernel comes out, there's no point in enabling HT on a Linux box; because the 2.4 scheduler is unaware of HT, all CPUs are treated the same, and the scheduler ends up starving one physical CPU. Performance on a dual-1.8Ghz Xeon, 1Gb RDRAM with HT enabled under 2.4.10 is roughly 5-15% slower than with HT disabled.

      2.5.31 with the HT patch dramatically reverses these numbers, providing an average performance that is 30% better than 2.4.10 without HT. YMMV, of course, and I'm not talking about OS performance, I'm talking about Oracle's performance. Still, 30% increase just for flipping a switch in the BIOS and recompiling the kernel is nothing to sneeze at.
      • 2.5.31 with the HT patch dramatically reverses these numbers, providing an average performance that is 30% better than 2.4.10 without HT.

        I don't think comparing Linux 2.5.31 with HT to Linux 2.4.10 without HT is a fair comparison. That supposed 30% performance gain could easily be attributed to many of the HUGE kernel changes made in the 2.5.x series. A more fair comparison would be 2.5.31 without HT turned ON and then turned OFF. Then you only have a single variable.
      • How many processor licenses does Oracle charge for a Power4, which is literally 4 PPC processors on a single die? What about a clustering approach that presents a server farm as a single virtual CPU?

        So many technologies can interfere with processor count that Oracle and Microsoft are using whatever is a best case scenario for them. If licensing is by physical silicon only, future iterations of multi-processing on die will really hamper software provides profitability - something you know they will not stand for.

        If it was exclusively per CPU, you would also see a lot of shops always buying the absolute fastest processors available, and specialty shops selling factory over clocks of those processors. Reduced licensing costs would actually make the price of exotic cooling methods and reduced cpu life look good.

        Same rule applies to Co-location in a different way. How much power can you stuff into 1u of rack space?

        If the most costly machine you can buy is a 48 CPU machine that can fit into 3u using Quad processors cards on a back plane but costs less in the long term because you are not paying for 24u of rack space that dual processor 1u machines would take, you buy it. Even if your per cpu cost is 10 times the cost of more conventional systems, the machine pays for itself in rack space costs in 10 months. After 18 months you upgrade the machine because by then you are paying twice as much for per cpu licenses as you could be paying with modern hardware.

        Note to businesses: Upgrade now while prices are depressed, and interest rates are low. Sticking with your old hardware is costing you in the long term.

        Take out a loan and upgrade. If your hardware is over 18 months old, you can cut your licensing costs in half. Don't sit on hardware when you are just waiting for it to break.

        IT is not a static business. Do not keep your hardware until it has no resale value. Do not keep your hardware until you are paying twice as much for licenses as you could be paying. Do not balk at high up front costs if it saves you 10 times it's upfront cost due to licensing/rack space costs. Do not keep old machines that are costing you three times as much in electricity at a given performance level.

        Do a real cost analysis, put in the time. This is the perfect time to upgrade. Competition has never been more fierce for the dollars you have to spend. You will get more value for your dollar now than you ever have been able to.

        IT is crap as capital. It has no value in three years. Keep you IT expenditures dynamic to avoid riding your capital investment into the ground. Playing the depreciation tax game will not save you nearly as much as keeping old hardware costs you in other areas.

        Disclaimer: I am not invested in any IT infrastructure provider and I do not do IT consulting. I just have to run my own shop like the rest of you.
  • Terra/Cray MTA (Score:5, Interesting)

    by astroboy ( 1125 ) <ljdursi@gmail.com> on Thursday October 03, 2002 @05:55PM (#4383789) Homepage
    The company that now owns the name Cray [cray.com] does something very much like this on a fairly grand scale on its own architecture, the MTA (Multi-Threaded Architecture) [cray.com]. Here, each processor switches between 128(!) hardware threads to take advantage of the sort of concurrancy you can get for waiting for memory access, etc.
  • Be careful (Score:2, Redundant)

    by essdodson ( 466448 )
    Hyperthreading needs to be used carefully. Certain applications you will end up with signifigant performance decreases with it enabled. Hyperthreading adds additional overhead to threading models and schedulers.
    • Quite true... your applications have to be designed specifically with multi-processing in mind otherwise your system will just end up wasting any potential performance gains on context switches and other overhead. Also, there are some data sets and types of processing that are better suited to multi-processing environments.

      Since most applications have only one processor in mind, it's typical to see dual processor systems that don't have much performance gain.

      The distributed systems (SETI, GIMPS and others) are very well suited to multi-processor environments... and this is taken to extremes by having the multi-processing done on entirely different machines with some 'master' computers that handle the overhead of reassembling the multiple datasets into something coherent for the whole system. It's actually an amazing thing when you get to thinking about it.

  • This is a very good article to read for those who are not really familiar with how a processor actually does it's work. The first three pages or so are generally what a senior-level college OS course will teach you.

    The distinction between a program in memory and a process in execution is important. It is also important to understand the illusion of simultaneous execution that is acheived through concurrent processes using context switches.

    Given all that, the article makes it easy to understand where your performance gains (and losses) happen having multi-processors, and indeed in having multi-processing on the same chip.

    All in all a good read.
    • "This is a very good article to read for those who are not really familiar with how a processor actually does it's work. The first three pages or so are generally what a senior-level college OS course will teach you."
      Not really. For starters, it doesn't go into any detail on how to use threads. They make no mention of things like semaphores, locks, monitors or race conditions, the sort of things that make threaded application development difficult.

      It goes into the very basics of that part of the OS module I did at the beginning of my second year, so please don't trivialise such courses.
      • That's because it's a /hardware/ article. For obvious reasons it doesn't mention how threads work because at the CPU level that is not relevant.

        For people who hasn't studied computer architecture I bet it's a rather tough read. (In which case they should go get Patterson & Henneseys books. They are just great regarding this type of stuff.)
        • Well that's all well and good, but it doesn't make the statement any more true. It touches on some areas an OS course/module teaches you, but it doesn't cover anywhere near the content the course/module would.
  • From the article:

    (On a related note, this brings to mind one of my favorite .sig file quotes: "A message from the system administrator: 'I've upped my priority. Now up yours.'")

    He stole my .sig !!
  • by molo ( 94384 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:15PM (#4383870) Journal
    KernelTrap has had some articles on Linux's support of HT. Ingo Molinar has been working on tuning the scheduler for HT systems. Articles are here:

    http://kerneltrap.org/node.php?id=391
    http://ke rneltrap.org/node.php?id=406

    </karmawhoring>
  • by keytoe ( 91531 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @06:33PM (#4383949) Homepage

    They call this stuff Symmetric Multi Threading, but I think that name is a bit misleading. While the thread scheduling itself is symmetric (all process threads are created equal and receive equal execution time), the shared resources on the CPU (cache, shared registers) are NOT symmetric. Since these shared resources are in essence handled on the way in to the execution unit, it becomes really easy to starve the processor when you have contention for one of those resources.

    While proper application development can alleviate some of this issue, it will depend heavily on the actual usage patterns of the system. When you have a lot of overlap coming in from memory (like the file system cache on a web server), you don't worry too much about threads stepping on each others' registers. This sounds fantastic for data servers.

    Desktop systems, on the other hand, almost never work this way. When you're playing MP3s in the background while web surfing and checking your email, you're already working with vastly different areas of data. Throw the OS and any various background processes into the mix and you've pretty much eliminated any gain and possibly slowed down due to cache contention.

    While this was touched on at the end of the article, I don't think it was given enough weight. It doesn't just depend on what applications you're running and wether they were written to take advantage of it. It depends on what you want to do with the whole system. For serving data, this will certainly be good (especially with multiple CPUs!). For desktop systems, this is a non-starter.

    I'm not disparaging the technology - far from it. I'm just waiting for Intel and Microsoft to market this to my mom as a way to have higher quality DVD playback - at twice the cost. And her buying it. Again.

    • They call this stuff Symmetric Multi Threading, but I think that name is a bit misleading.

      I believe when symmetric is used in the context of SMP and SMT it is intended to mean "all execution elements have the same public interface".

      Things would be asymmetric in cases where there was a differentiation between the performance or capabilities of the execution elements - e.g. where one processor could handle interrupts and the other couldn't. An 80286+80287 is an example of an asymmetric system - one execution element can only do FP stuff, the other can do everything but FP.

    • It's not symmetric multithreading.
      It's SIMULTANEOUS multithreading.

      This means that both threads are in the processor pipeline simulatenously.
  • by brandido ( 612020 ) on Thursday October 03, 2002 @07:46PM (#4384328) Homepage Journal
    When Intel switched from the P3 architecture to the P4 architecture, they increased the depth of their pipeline from 10 to 20, I believe. My understanding was that this significantly increased the performance penalty for mispredicts for branches and whatnot requiring a flush of the pipeline. I am curious if adding SMT to this will increase the penalty for mispredicts even more, if both threads must be flushed or only the one. If this is the case, are there cases where the penalty would outweight the benefit?
    • More likely, the processor would hold off on the program branching and send code for another process down the pipe. That way, you have slowed down (definitely) the process that is branching, as it is waiting for the branch, but you have allowed it to perform calculations on another process in the same time. Effectively making sure that you should never have to "flush" the registers.

      So... they could eliminate the whole concept of branch "penalties" altogether.

      Now is this how it is actually implemented? I don't know. There are already plenty of complications present in the processor, so changing this bit of logic is far from trivial. Still, since a branch calculation is a fixed amount of time that leaves part of the execution units free, I don't know of any reason this sort of scheme could not be implemented.

      Perhaps if someone else has some information?
  • According to this article [theinquirer.net] Windows XP home and Pro already support Hyperthreading as does Linux Kernel 2.4.x and later.

    ASUS has released BIOS upgrades [tech-report.com] to the P4T533 line of motherboards that now support Hyperthreading.

    And rumors persist that Hyperthreading is on the current P4 chips (Socket 478?) and may be enabled at a later time if all goes well
  • a clarification (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04, 2002 @02:28AM (#4385536)

    Since lots of people seem to be missing the point of "hyperthreading", as Intel is calling it, I feel like jumping in and trying to clarify a little bit.

    Processor clocks have gotten faster and faster and faster and faster over the last decade. Multiple orders of magnitudes faster. Not only that, but processors have incorporated increasingly clever tricks to process the data they have available to them. Memory speeds have increased too, but even with DDR and all that great stuff, they haven't kept pace. So there are times when your super-fast processor is just sitting there waiting around because it's run out of data to process.

    Even if you could (cheaply) make memory that actually ran at 2 GHz or whatever, this would not solve an even more fundamental problem that makes the situation worse: due to the speed of light, a 2 GHz processor is going to have to wait a really significant amount of time if it has to wait on main memory before it's time to process something.

    So, here's a question for you: if the processor has to wait a really long time, maybe enough time to execute maybe like 50 instructions, what should it do during that time? Should it:

    1. Sit on its butt and do absolutely nothing at all, or
    2. Quickly flip over to another thread and start executing its instructions?

    Well, the idea behind the hyperthreading (a/k/a thread-level parallelism) is that the processor should make some sort of effort to do something.

    So, IMHO hyperthreading isn't stupid or a marketing ploy. It's a genuine attempt (one that many processor makers are working on, by the way) to solve a genuine problem. And not only a genuine problem, but one that will increasingly become a bottleneck. (It's already bad enough that it has its own name: "The Von Neumann Bottleneck".)

    And by the way, the advantage of this over two processors is that you don't have to build two chips! You don't get double the performance, but it's quite possible that you might get a better bang for the buck. (Notice I said "might".)

    Also note on the cache pollution issue (where one thread slows down another by "hogging" the cache and actually causing slower execution for another) that there are ways to mitigate this problem. An obvious one that comes to mind is to bias the processor towards executing a particular one of the threads. That way, one thread runs much more often and should tend to have what it needs in the cache.

    Anyway, until the economy gets better and I find a way not to be one of the masses of unemployed software developers anymore, I'm not buying one of these fancy processors...

  • Just so that it won't be later patented...

    The starvation issues with symmetric-multithreading can easily be addressed by keeping an instruction count for each virtual thread; perhaps hooked to an interrupt the OS can use to tell when each thread has consumed its allotted processor resource.

    That way, threads that have been starved for resources will remain in the process core longer than the any who happen to "hog" a resource. In other words, instead of time slicing, you can use instruction slicing to insure fair use of the scheduler between contending threads.

    Volla! Problem solved. (Not counting the dozen man-years it would take to implement.)

  • by ShakaUVM ( 157947 ) on Friday October 04, 2002 @03:11PM (#4388954) Homepage Journal
    UC San Diego has been a leader in research on hyperthreading. We used to have the Tera MTA, which kinda pioneered the whole field, and we have Dr. Dean Tullsen (and his lab of students), whose hyperthreading architecture was used in the new, now-cancelled, alpha chip.

    References: The Tera: http://www.cs.ucsd.edu/users/carter/Tera/tera.html
    Dean Tullsen: http://charlotte.ucsd.edu/users/tullsen/

    I was one of the first five students to use the Tera after it came out of development. I decided to take a different approach in evaluating its performance. I didn't like what the Tera corporate benchmarkers were doing. Which was taking applications with known parallelism, writing a serial version of the code, and then post with glowing reviews the results of the Tera automatically finding parallelism, ignoring that the number of pragmas they had to put into the code to allow the compiler to discover parallelism was more work that just writing a parallel code oneself.

    I instead called them on their advertising that their compiler could discover latent parallelism in any computation-heavy code. I noticed John Carmack's .plan file at the time openly questioned the same claim, so I took the single threaded, computation-intensive utility for Quake2 (BSP; LIGHT & VIS are multithreaded) and ran them on the Tera. Nutshell: it couldn't find parallelism. The 300Mhz Tera supercomputer ran at the equivalent speed of a 600Mhz Pentium. Which is crap considering the incredible memory bandwidth and number of computational units it had available.

    When I reported the results to Carmack, his response was, "I have never been a big believer in magically parallizing dusty deck codes. I don't mind specifying explicitly parallel activities and threads, especially with the large payoffs involved."

    Cheers,
    Bill Kerney

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