diff options
author | Dave Cobbley <david.j.cobbley@linux.intel.com> | 2018-08-14 20:05:37 +0300 |
---|---|---|
committer | Brad Bishop <bradleyb@fuzziesquirrel.com> | 2018-08-23 04:26:31 +0300 |
commit | eb8dc40360f0cfef56fb6947cc817a547d6d9bc6 (patch) | |
tree | de291a73dc37168da6370e2cf16c347d1eba9df8 /meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction | |
parent | 9c3cf826d853102535ead04cebc2d6023eff3032 (diff) | |
download | openbmc-eb8dc40360f0cfef56fb6947cc817a547d6d9bc6.tar.xz |
[Subtree] Removing import-layers directory
As part of the move to subtrees, need to bring all the import layers
content to the top level.
Change-Id: I4a163d10898cbc6e11c27f776f60e1a470049d8f
Signed-off-by: Dave Cobbley <david.j.cobbley@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Brad Bishop <bradleyb@fuzziesquirrel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction')
-rw-r--r-- | meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction | 108 |
1 files changed, 108 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction b/meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3e1f7cc6d --- /dev/null +++ b/meta-openembedded/meta-oe/licenses/GPL-2.0-with-lmbench-restriction @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ +%M% %I% %E% + +The set of programs and documentation known as "lmbench" are distributed +under the Free Software Foundation's General Public License with the +following additional restrictions (which override any conflicting +restrictions in the GPL): + +1. You may not distribute results in any public forum, in any publication, + or in any other way if you have modified the benchmarks. + +2. You may not distribute the results for a fee of any kind. This includes + web sites which generate revenue from advertising. + +If you have modifications or enhancements that you wish included in +future versions, please mail those to me, Larry McVoy, at lm@bitmover.com. + +========================================================================= + +Rationale for the publication restrictions: + +In summary: + + a) LMbench is designed to measure enough of an OS that if you do well in + all catagories, you've covered latency and bandwidth in networking, + disks, file systems, VM systems, and memory systems. + b) Multiple times in the past people have wanted to report partial results. + Without exception, they were doing so to show a skewed view of whatever + it was they were measuring (for example, one OS fit small processes into + segments and used the segment register to switch them, getting good + results, but did not want to report large process context switches + because those didn't look as good). + c) We insist that if you formally report LMbench results, you have to + report all of them and make the raw results file easily available. + Reporting all of them means in that same publication, a pointer + does not count. Formally, in this context, means in a paper, + on a web site, etc., but does not mean the exchange of results + between OS developers who are tuning a particular subsystem. + +We have a lot of history with benchmarking and feel strongly that there +is little to be gained and a lot to be lost if we allowed the results +to be published in isolation, without the complete story being told. + +There has been a lot of discussion about this, with people not liking this +restriction, more or less on the freedom principle as far as I can tell. +We're not swayed by that, our position is that we are doing the right +thing for the OS community and will stick to our guns on this one. + +It would be a different matter if there were 3 other competing +benchmarking systems out there that did what LMbench does and didn't have +the same reporting rules. There aren't and as long as that is the case, +I see no reason to change my mind and lots of reasons not to do so. I'm +sorry if I'm a pain in the ass on this topic, but I'm doing the right +thing for you and the sooner people realize that the sooner we can get on +to real work. + +Operating system design is a largely an art of balancing tradeoffs. +In many cases improving one part of the system has negative effects +on other parts of the system. The art is choosing which parts to +optimize and which to not optimize. Just like in computer architecture, +you can optimize the common instructions (RISC) or the uncommon +instructions (CISC), but in either case there is usually a cost to +pay (in RISC uncommon instructions are more expensive than common +instructions, and in CISC common instructions are more expensive +than required). The art lies in knowing which operations are +important and optmizing those while minimizing the impact on the +rest of the system. + +Since lmbench gives a good overview of many important system features, +users may see the performance of the system as a whole, and can +see where tradeoffs may have been made. This is the driving force +behind the publication restriction: any idiot can optimize certain +subsystems while completely destroying overall system performance. +If said idiot publishes *only* the numbers relating to the optimized +subsystem, then the costs of the optimization are hidden and readers +will mistakenly believe that the optimization is a good idea. By +including the publication restriction readers would be able to +detect that the optimization improved the subsystem performance +while damaging the rest of the system performance and would be able +to make an informed decision as to the merits of the optimization. + +Note that these restrictions only apply to *publications*. We +intend and encourage lmbench's use during design, development, +and tweaking of systems and applications. If you are tuning the +linux or BSD TCP stack, then by all means, use the networking +benchmarks to evaluate the performance effects of various +modifications; Swap results with other developers; use the +networking numbers in isolation. The restrictions only kick +in when you go to *publish* the results. If you sped up the +TCP stack by a factor of 2 and want to publish a paper with the +various tweaks or algorithms used to accomplish this goal, then +you can publish the networking numbers to show the improvement. +However, the paper *must* also include the rest of the standard +lmbench numbers to show how your tweaks may (or may not) have +impacted the rest of the system. The full set of numbers may +be included in an appendix, but they *must* be included in the +paper. + +This helps protect the community from adopting flawed technologies +based on incomplete data. It also helps protect the community from +misleading marketing which tries to sell systems based on partial +(skewed) lmbench performance results. + +We have seen many cases in the past where partial or misleading +benchmark results have caused great harm to the community, and +we want to ensure that our benchmark is not used to perpetrate +further harm and support false or misleading claims. + + |