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218 points chmaynard | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.205s | source
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amelius ◴[] No.41886918[source]
> A higher level of preemption enables the system to respond more quickly to events; whether an event is the movement of a mouse or an "imminent meltdown" signal from a nuclear reactor, faster response tends to be more gratifying. But a higher level of preemption can hurt the overall throughput of the system; workloads with a lot of long-running, CPU-intensive tasks tend to benefit from being disturbed as little as possible. More frequent preemption can also lead to higher lock contention. That is why the different modes exist; the optimal preemption mode will vary for different workloads.

Why isn't the level of preemption a property of the specific event, rather than of some global mode? Some events need to be handled with less latency than others.

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1. biorach ◴[] No.41887125[source]
Arguably PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY, as described in the article is an attempt in this direction which is being deprecated.