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World of Software > Computing > Revisiting The Linux 6.19 Performance With “NEXT_BUDDY” Now Disabled Review
Computing

Revisiting The Linux 6.19 Performance With “NEXT_BUDDY” Now Disabled Review

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Last updated: 2026/01/26 at 11:00 AM
News Room Published 26 January 2026
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Revisiting The Linux 6.19 Performance With “NEXT_BUDDY” Now Disabled Review
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Back at the start of the Linux 6.19 kernel cycle I ran benchmarks showing some scheduler performance regressions with the new kernel. Fortunately, two weeks out from the Linux 6.19 stable release, merged this weekend was disabling the scheduler’s NEXT_BUDDY feature due to performance regressions. Here are some fresh benchmarks looking at the latest Linux 6.19 Git state with/without NEXT_BUDDY and comparing it to Linux 6.18 stable for reference.

The NEXT_BUDDY feature that was adapted to EEVDF and enabled back during the Linux 6.19 merge window is now disabled in Linux 6.19-rc7 due to reported performance regressions in MySQL, SPECjbb, and DayTrader. With some of my Linux 6.19 regressions published in early December tracing back to the NEXT_BUDDY commit as a possible culprit during the Git bisect, over the weekend I ran some all-new benchmarks to see the impact of this late disabling of NEXT_BUDDY in Linux 6.19.

Linux 6.19 NEXT_BUDDY

On the same AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9995WX workstation, the following kernel combinations were tested:

v6.18 – The stable Linux 6.18 LTS kernel release.

Linux 6.19 Git 23 Jan – The Linux 6.19 Git state as of Friday night and using the same Kconfig as v6.18 and with all new v6.19 kernel options at their defaults.

No NEXT_BUDDY – The same Linux 6.19 Git state as above but disabling NEXT_BUDDY as done in the patch that was merged this weekend ahead of v6.19-rc7.

From there a wide variety of benchmarks were conducted for seeing the impact of NEXT_BUDDY, given that there was believed to be some performance benefits when the code originally was merged but now clearly being responsible for some regressions too.

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