Wine and Dual core CPU
Wine and Dual core CPU
I have searched the forums and cant seem to find an answer. I have noticed that when i run games and programs under wine its only useing 1 core. While when i run native Linux apps they use both cores. Also the games and programs that i am running under wine use both cores when run under windows. Is this a bug, or maybe just something i dont have setup correcly on my computer.
Computer specs.
4600+ AMD dual core.
2gig RAM
160gig sata II HD
Geforce 8800GT video card.
Ubuntu 8.04
Computer specs.
4600+ AMD dual core.
2gig RAM
160gig sata II HD
Geforce 8800GT video card.
Ubuntu 8.04
Re: Wine and Dual core CPU
Wine's GUI part is single-threaded. So yeah it will use only one CPU.dabbill wrote:I have searched the forums and cant seem to find an answer. I have noticed that when i run games and programs under wine its only useing 1 core. While when i run native Linux apps they use both cores. Also the games and programs that i am running under wine use both cores when run under windows. Is this a bug, or maybe just something i dont have setup correcly on my computer.
Computer specs.
4600+ AMD dual core.
2gig RAM
160gig sata II HD
Geforce 8800GT video card.
Ubuntu 8.04
Wine and Dual core CPU
On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 1:54 AM, dabbill <[email protected]> wrote:
What apps in particular aren't using dual cores?I have searched the forums and cant seem to find an answer. I have noticed that when i run games and programs under wine its only useing 1 core. While when i run native Linux apps they use both cores. Also the games and programs that i am running under wine use both cores when run under windows. Is this a bug, or maybe just something i dont have setup correcly on my computer.
Computer specs.
4600+ AMD dual core.
2gig RAM
160gig sata II HD
Geforce 8800GT video card.
Ubuntu 8.04
Wine and Dual core CPU
On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 1:44 PM, dabbill <[email protected]> wrote:
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11674The main one i notice it on is World of Warcraft. Also noticed when i am installing stuff with wine it only uses 1 core.
Wine and Dual core CPU
I notice the CPU almost maxed on World of Warctaft as well, however I
am not sure there is much we can do about it.
For what it is worth I run World of Warcraft on FreeBSD 7, it works
really well. I just wish we could boost fps a little bit.
Sam Fourman Jr.
am not sure there is much we can do about it.
For what it is worth I run World of Warcraft on FreeBSD 7, it works
really well. I just wish we could boost fps a little bit.
Sam Fourman Jr.
Wine and Dual core CPU
dabbill wrote:
ever noticed it using both intensively on windows, so it may not be a
wine problem at all.
I noticed wow only uses one core on wine too. However, I can't say I'veThe main one i notice it on is World of Warcraft. Also noticed when i am installing stuff with wine it only uses 1 core.
ever noticed it using both intensively on windows, so it may not be a
wine problem at all.
Wine and Dual core CPU
wow may not be using 2 cores in windows, it just may look like it as
windows will flip processes between the cores (giving the illusion of a
program using more than one core) - linux will tend to keep them on one core
you can try changing your scheduler and see if you can squeeze more
performance out. tweaking settings in the video drivers will also give
performance increases, not to mention 'nice' can help smooth things when
used with care.
Dean
PleegWat wrote:
http://fragfest.com.au
windows will flip processes between the cores (giving the illusion of a
program using more than one core) - linux will tend to keep them on one core
you can try changing your scheduler and see if you can squeeze more
performance out. tweaking settings in the video drivers will also give
performance increases, not to mention 'nice' can help smooth things when
used with care.
Dean
PleegWat wrote:
--dabbill wrote:I noticed wow only uses one core on wine too. However, I can't say I'veThe main one i notice it on is World of Warcraft. Also noticed when i
am installing stuff with wine it only uses 1 core.
ever noticed it using both intensively on windows, so it may not be a
wine problem at all.
http://fragfest.com.au
Wine and Dual core CPU
dabbill wrote:
decides that it 'needs' all of one of the cores. I've had problems with
Windows on a Dual Core appearing like it was locked up. Got the Task
Manager to run and one process was consuming 99% of the CPU.
I hope that Wine can be rewritten to use n-1 cores, which will leave at
least one core 'open' in case of a runaway process.
James McKenzie
It works the same way on an Intel Mac, which is good when a programI have searched the forums and cant seem to find an answer. I have noticed that when i run games and programs under wine its only useing 1 core. While when i run native Linux apps they use both cores. Also the games and programs that i am running under wine use both cores when run under windows. Is this a bug, or maybe just something i dont have setup correcly on my computer.
Computer specs.
4600+ AMD dual core.
2gig RAM
160gig sata II HD
Geforce 8800GT video card.
Ubuntu 8.04
decides that it 'needs' all of one of the cores. I've had problems with
Windows on a Dual Core appearing like it was locked up. Got the Task
Manager to run and one process was consuming 99% of the CPU.
I hope that Wine can be rewritten to use n-1 cores, which will leave at
least one core 'open' in case of a runaway process.
James McKenzie
Wine and Dual core CPU
Am 07.05.2008 um 15:54 schrieb James McKenzie:
exhausted you can still launch additional applications or tools.
You'll get 50% of one core only[1], but that's plenty to find and
kill a runaway process.
If you ever experience a totally locked system, this is clearly a bug
of the OS. Ah, and please don't confuse a locked display process with
a locked operating system.
HopeThatHelps,
Markus
[1] Here I've simplified real behaviour a bit.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Dipl. Ing. Markus Hitter
http://www.jump-ing.de/
Leaving one core free won't help you at all. Even with all coresI hope that Wine can be rewritten to use n-1 cores, which will
leave at least one core 'open' in case of a runaway process.
exhausted you can still launch additional applications or tools.
You'll get 50% of one core only[1], but that's plenty to find and
kill a runaway process.
If you ever experience a totally locked system, this is clearly a bug
of the OS. Ah, and please don't confuse a locked display process with
a locked operating system.
HopeThatHelps,
Markus
[1] Here I've simplified real behaviour a bit.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Dipl. Ing. Markus Hitter
http://www.jump-ing.de/