Linux 7.0 IO_uring: Hash table upgrade for IOPOLL efficiency

Expanding on early Phoronix reports, Linux kernel 7.0 will replace linked lists with hash tables in IO_uring's IOPOLL for O(1) lookups, targeting major throughput gains in async I/O for servers and databases.

Following Phoronix's initial coverage of IO_uring IOPOLL upgrades in Linux 7.0, new details reveal a shift from linked lists to hash tables for poll entry management. This delivers average O(1) complexity for lookups and insertions, resolving bottlenecks in high-polling scenarios where linear searches previously dominated.

IO_uring, introduced in kernel 5.1, uses shared ring buffers for low-latency async I/O. Recent precursors like Linux 6.13's hybrid polling and ring resizing (as noted in prior series articles) set the stage, with creator Jens Axboe driving refinements.

Benchmarks from earlier kernels (e.g., Linux 5.7 polled I/O tests) suggest amplified IOPS for NVMe and multi-connection workloads in tools like QEMU and PostgreSQL. Yet challenges remain: security vulnerabilities (e.g., rootkit risks in April 2025 reports) and distro kernel dependencies.

These changes bolster Linux's edge in cloud, edge, and database environments under heavy loads.

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Illustration depicting Linux 7.0 kernel enhancements to AppArmor, AMDGPU, Ceph, and eCryptfs, featuring Tux at a coding workstation.
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Linux 7.0 kernel merges several enhancements

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The Linux 7.0 kernel development has incorporated updates to AppArmor, AMDGPU, Ceph, and eCryptfs. These changes include security and hardware support improvements. The merges signal ongoing progress toward the kernel's release.

Early Phoronix coverage highlights anticipated improvements to IO_uring's IOPOLL polling in Linux 7.0, building on prior kernel refinements for superior asynchronous I/O performance in high-throughput applications.

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Researchers have used artificial intelligence to identify a significant performance boost in Linux's IO_uring subsystem. The discovery reveals a 50-80x improvement in efficiency. This finding highlights AI's role in optimizing open-source software.

Phoronix reports a minor performance tweak in the Linux kernel 7.0, released on February 28, 2026, showing gains particularly on AMD Zen 2 processors amid broader enhancements like Zen 6 support.

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The Linux kernel version 7.0 has incorporated updates to its scheduler. These changes feature a time slice extension along with efforts focused on performance and scalability. The updates were reported by Phoronix.

Early tests of the Linux 6.19 development kernel on a dual AMD EPYC 9965 processor server reveal strong performance in high-performance computing workloads. Despite some scheduler issues, the kernel shows promising results for AI and HPC applications. These benchmarks compare it against the stable Linux 6.18 version.

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Developers are considering sub-scheduler support as a key feature for the upcoming Linux 7.1 kernel release. This addition, related to cgroup and sched-ext, could enhance scheduling capabilities in the open-source operating system. Phoronix highlights it as potentially one of the most exciting updates.

 

 

 

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