Incoming and outgoing processing for a given TCP connection often execute on different cores: an incoming packet is typically processed on the core that receives the interrupt, while outgoing data processing occurs on the core running the relevant user code. As a result, accesses to read/write connection state (such as TCP control blocks) often involve cache invalidations and data movement between cores' caches. These can take hundreds of processor cycles, enough to significantly reduce performance.We present a new design, called Affinity-Accept, that causes all processing for a given TCP connection to occur on the same core. Affinity-Accept arranges for the network interface to determine the core on which application processing for each new connection occurs, in a lightweight way; it adjusts the card's choices only in response to imbalances in CPU scheduling. Measurements show that for the Apache web server serving static files on a 48-core AMD system, Affinity-Accept reduces time spent in the TCP stack by 30% and improves overall throughput by 24%.
An Operating System is described which will run on a wide variety of configurations of the I.C.T. 1900, and can handle a large number of online console users while at the same time running several offline (background) jobs. The system is not oriented towards either mode and can be either a batch processing system (such as the ATLAS Supervisor, IBSYS, or GECOS), or a multiaccess system (resembling, to the user, CTSS or MULTICS), or both simultaneously, depending on the installation, which can adjust the Schedulers.
Both online users and offline jobs use a common Command Language. The system includes a Multilevel device-independent File Store.
A set of instructions is described which facilitates the construction of an operating system implemented as a set of cooperating processes. An unusual feature of the instructions is that they are 'hybrid' -- i.e. they may either operate as conventional machine instructions or give rise to a supervisor - call interrupt, depending on circumstances.
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