Re: [PATCH 1/7] [NET]: uninline skb_put, de-bloats a lot
From: Matt Mackall <hidden>
Date: 2008-03-28 01:20:17
Also in:
lkml
From: Matt Mackall <hidden>
Date: 2008-03-28 01:20:17
Also in:
lkml
On Thu, 2008-03-27 at 17:54 -0700, Joe Perches wrote:
On Thu, 2008-03-27 at 19:11 -0500, Matt Mackall wrote:quoted
In the 486 era, when CPU performance was close to 1:1 with memory, branches were more expensive than sequential memory fetches, and registers were scarce, inlining made a fair amount of sense. But now we've moved very far away from that indeed:Systems have certainly improved but Linux is used in a wide variety of CPU Hz, memory & register architectures. Some of those systems haven't changed at all.
It's true. In particular, 486s haven't changed at all since the 486 era. What's changed is that people no longer run 486s to go fast, they run them to save money. Saving memory is a win for those people. The same goes for embedded systems. Saving memory is much higher on the priority scale than performance. And the fact that saving memory on the low end aligns very nicely with increasing performance on the high end means that's the direction we're going. -- Mathematics is the supreme nostalgia of our time.