Scott Lowe pointed to KB Article 1020524 in his short take article. Although I agree with Scott that it is a useful article it is actually technically incorrect. I wanted to point it out as when Scott points to something you know many will pick up on it.
On Nehalem systems with Hardware assisted Memory Management Unit (MMU), TPS improves performance from 10 – 20% by using large pages.
Since TPS is done per small page, the VMkernel delays page sharing until host memory becomes over-committed. In the background, the ESX host gathers information about TPS, then uses it when it needs more memory.
It might be just a detail, but it is important to realize that it is not TPS that improves performance but Large Pages. TPS has got absolutely nothing to do with it and does not impact performance anywhere near the mentioned 10-20%.
One thing to note is that TPS does identify the pages which can be shared, however as 2MB pages are used they are not actively shared. When a system gets overcommitted those Large Pages (2MB) will be broken down in Small Pages (4KB) and the already identified pages will shared.
I just love TPS….
"KB Article 1020524 (TPS and Nehalem)" originally appeared on Yellow-Bricks.com. Follow me on twitter - @DuncanYB.
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