nanog mailing list archives

Re: Whats so difficult about ISSU


From: Pete Lumbis <alumbis () gmail com>
Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2012 16:58:51 -0500

On Fri, Nov 9, 2012 at 4:00 PM, Saku Ytti <saku () ytti fi> wrote:
For IOS-XE we have Linux in charge of the scheduler with a
multi-threaded IOSd process responsible for the control plane.  I'm

I'm sceptical if this means there isn't normal IOS run-to-completion
scheduler, certainly not all ios processes are separate threads to linux
kernel? But I guess this is moving target. Would be interesting to hear how
many threads, what are threads relative priorities, what runs in each
thread etc.
But anyhow just to hear it is threaded, is good news. Does this mean, IOSd
can capitalize on multiple cores? (Something JunOS cannot do today)


I do not believe that the linux scheduler is run to completion, but to
be honest I'm not 100% certain. I know a big reason for IOS-XE was to
be able to operate in multicore environments. From a high level you
have IOSd as a process with each traditional process (BGP, OSPF, IP
Input) as a thread within IOSd. Overall IOS-XE is Linux managing a few
processes: IOSd, FMan-RP, CMan-RP (and a few others) FMan deals with
adjacencies and CMan deals with modules/cards and IOSd all the
interesting stuff. Since Linux is the piece actually running the show
IOS-XE gets all the memory management and scheduling benefits that
linux has.


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