<font color='black' size='2' face='arial'>LLVM is not implemented on Haiku at this time.
<div><br>
</div>
<div>Thanks,</div>
<div>- Andrew<br>
<br>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<br>
<br>
<div style="font-family:arial,helvetica;font-size:10pt;color:black">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com><br>
To: hudsonco1 <hudsonco1@aol.com><br>
Cc: mesa-users <mesa-users@lists.freedesktop.org><br>
Sent: Thu, Dec 30, 2010 5:08 am<br>
Subject: Re: [Mesa-users] Mesa on multiple cores?<br>
<br>
<div id="AOLMsgPart_0_d3d414cc-d7a8-4af6-add5-e3e5276b2d34" style="margin: 0px;font-family: Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif;font-size: 12px;color: #000;background-color: #fff;">
<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>On 12/27/2010 01:57 PM, <a __removedlink__1437777658__href="mailto:hudsonco1@aol.com">hudsonco1@aol.com</a> wrote:
> Does the current version of Mesa benefit from multiple cores? If so, how
> do you activate this feature?
> I looked but did not see anything in the FAQ or docs.
>
> Benchmarks indicate that 'default' version does not automatically
> benefit from multiple cores. But there is an older reference
> that indicates V2.6 is both thread safe and benefits from them.
>
> The platform is Haiku, which has pthreads.
The Gallium llvmpipe driver is multithreaded and will use all
available cores. I don't know if LLVM works on Haiku. There's no
other parallelism implemented in Mesa at this time.
-Brian
</tt></pre>
</div>
<!-- end of AOLMsgPart_0_d3d414cc-d7a8-4af6-add5-e3e5276b2d34 -->
</div>
</div>
</font>