<html><head></head><body><div style="color:#000; background-color:#fff; font-family:HelveticaNeue, Helvetica Neue, Helvetica, Arial, Lucida Grande, sans-serif;font-size:16px"><div dir="ltr" id="yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1476216801148_404189"><span id="yui_3_16_0_ym19_1_1476216801148_404190">I am interested in this too. Only way I know of so far is to use taskset or equivalent. Ideally Erlang should bind each scheduler to each single cpu as speced by the topology.</span></div> <div class="qtdSeparateBR"><br><br></div><div class="yahoo_quoted" style="display: block;"> <div style="font-family: HelveticaNeue, Helvetica Neue, Helvetica, Arial, Lucida Grande, sans-serif; font-size: 16px;"> <div style="font-family: HelveticaNeue, Helvetica Neue, Helvetica, Arial, Lucida Grande, sans-serif; font-size: 16px;"> <div dir="ltr"><font size="2" face="Arial"> On Monday, October 17, 2016 9:35 AM, Tan Duong <dn.nhattan@gmail.com> wrote:<br></font></div> <br><br> <div class="y_msg_container"><div id="yiv8332816191"><div dir="ltr">Hi everybody,<div><br></div><div>I recently get to experiment an Erlang program.</div><div>My machine is a multicore CPUs system, which contains some physical cores (say n), each cores features hyper threads (so the maximum CPU threads are 2*n)</div><div>However, I just want to experiment the program on physical cores only (n cores), not with hyperthreading.</div><div>is there any mechanism to do so?</div><div><br></div><div>Best Regards,</div><div>Tan</div></div></div><br>_______________________________________________<br>erlang-questions mailing list<br><a ymailto="mailto:erlang-questions@erlang.org" href="mailto:erlang-questions@erlang.org">erlang-questions@erlang.org</a><br><a href="http://erlang.org/mailman/listinfo/erlang-questions" target="_blank">http://erlang.org/mailman/listinfo/erlang-questions</a><br><br><br></div> </div> </div> </div></div></body></html>