Hi,

It depends on your project configuration too.
Some time ago, I wanted to split my big queue into smaller ones but I
rollbacked because multiple parallel builds in my server works slower than
a queue of builds.

Finally, we kept 5 queues :
* the big one for IC ~160 projects
* config (monitoring the cc config) = 1 project
* Build and Deploy (we deploy our webservices/applications/services via
CC.NET) ~ 80 projects
* Stocked Proc Deploy (we deploy our SP via CC.NET too =) ) = 1 project

Cheers,
Benjamin

2012/7/3 Ruben Willems <[email protected]>

> Hi
>
> normally it should work properly as you described,
> it all depends a bit on the configuration of course.
>
> For example : suppose you have 8 servers, and all those servers have 5
> projects in 1 queue
> --> a total of 40 projects
>
> if you would just merge it into 1 big server, but still keep the 1 queue,
> it would be slower.
> Reason, there is only 1 queue, so there can be only 1 project building at
> a time.
> and 1 project building is 1 thread, and that is not shared among CPU's.
>
> even if the cpu's themselve are faster, 1 build would be faster, but the
> whole picture (40 projects average time)
> would be a lot slower.
>
> So also update your config accordingly
>
>
>
>
> with kind regards
> Ruben Willems
>
>
>
> On 3 July 2012 19:24, Sebastinator <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> In other words, if i setup a server with 8 cpus and 32 gigs of RAM, will
>> it be the same thing as 8 different servers with 1 cpu and 4 gigs of RAM?
>> If I merge all our integration servers into a Big one, will it works
>> properly using all the available ressources (CPU) ?
>>
>>
>>
>> Le mardi 3 juillet 2012 11:20:27 UTC-4, Sebastinator a écrit :
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I want to migrate our CCNETservers from 2003 to 2008 version.
>>> Is there any compatibility issues?
>>>
>>> And I need to know of the ccservice.exe supports 4 or more CPUs?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks!
>>
>>
>

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