问题
Hi guys this question might seem weird, but I'm using the Haptek People Putty player for my C# application and I've seen people say in the forums that it doesn't work well with a multicore processor. My application runs well on my Core 2 Duo laptop but it lags a lot when I try running it on a Quad Core desktop. I was thinking of investigating this for myself and in that case, I would have to force my application to run on a single core. Is that possible in C#? Thanks!
回答1:
Where a Process
variable proc
holds the process you care about (Process.GetCurrentProcess()
for the running Process, obtaining it from GetProcesses()
or GetProcessesByName()
etc. for another process. Then:
foreach(ProcessThread pt in proc.Threads)
{
pt.IdealProcessor = 0;
pt.ProcessorAffinity = (IntPtr)1;
}
IdealProcessor is a zero-based identity of a single core. ProcessorAffinity is a bitmask, so 1 allows core zero, 2 allows core one, 3 allows cores zero and one, 4 allows core two, and so on.
I would test this thoroughly. Chances are very strong that this will actually damage your performance, in reducing the ability to make use of different cores, which is after-all generally an advantage.
回答2:
If the application is single-threaded, it will not take advantage of multiple cores. However, it is possible that the kernel can bump the thread around between cores. I doubt that this is the cause of your performance problems.
If you would like to tie the thread down to a single core (not sure if this can be guaranteed), you might want to check out the System.Diagnostics.ProcessThread.ProcessorAffinity
property, although I have never used it myself.
回答3:
Not really possible IN C#. Well, no way i know off. You need interop, with that it works.
Are you using multiple threads? If not - hm - sorry - not a lot you can do. Standard UI applications are not using multiple cores anyway.
Basically, applications not using Threads (Work items use threads) are inherently single core anyway.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3429999/force-c-sharp-application-to-use-a-single-core-in-a-pc-with-a-multicore-processo