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This configuration is meant to be used on systems using the cpu isolator module (the default in Debian 11), instead of the patched real time kernel. In order to be able to load and unload models without crashing your system, the cores you plan using for real time models must be isolated. This can be done by editing the kernel's command line parameters.
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This configuration is meant to be used on systems using the cpu isolator module (the default RCG >= 5.0 ), instead of the patched real time kernel. In order to be able to load and unload models without crashing your system, the cores you plan using for real time models must be isolated. This can be done by editing the kernel's command line parameters.
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## Figuring out the number of cores you have
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```
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... | ... | @@ -36,4 +36,4 @@ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/isolated |
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### Other notes
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Starting with Debian 11 (Kernel 5.10) the real time custom kernel patch was replaced with a loadable CPU isolating kernel module. This means we don't need a custom kernel anymore, but this isolation step is required to keep the system from crashing when loading/unloading modules. |
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\ No newline at end of file |
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Starting with RCG 5.0 the real time custom kernel patch was replaced with a loadable CPU isolating kernel module. This means we don't need a custom kernel anymore, but this isolation step is required to keep the system from crashing when loading/unloading modules. |
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\ No newline at end of file |