The fact that a processor has 2 cores doesn't mean you have to use them, just like a MB with 2 sockets doesn't need both to be used. If the OS is faster with 1 processor than 2, then you only use one of the cores. The concept that you have to fire up both of them just because they're there is just stupid.
Freebsd 4.11 is dead because of a stupid decision but people who thought that MP would have been working 2 years ago. They continue to not be able to promise any scalability in the foreseeable future, so maybe they need to revisit the decision. "supporting" 4.11 only means making it work with new devices, not porting everything back. The only things necessary would be SATA and a bunch of NICs. Most MBs work with 4.x so its not a big maintenance project. DT --- NOC Prowip <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Saturday 14 October 2006 12:38, Mike Horwath > wrote: > > On Sat, Oct 14, 2006 at 11:13:24AM -0300, NOC > Prowip wrote: > > > Hi, I am hooking in here without any > intention to fire things up but > > > isn 't this discussion certainly useless? > Not only 4.11 is gone but > > > also i386 is practically marked to die out > as well as UP systems > > > are. > > > > Wow, I hope not. > > > > only a matter of time I guess, next year we > will have 64bit quad-cores and I > am really not sure if anybody will build 32bit > versions ever again > > > Unless you are separating out i386/i486 and > such. > > > > are this dinos still serving somewhere? > > > Many people refer to i386 as all 32bit x86 > systems. > > > > I would say this preference is mostly set by > beeing afraid of migration (lots > of things can come up when migrating a > production server) or by lack of money > to buy some nasty HW ... > > > > > All platforms are going to be 64bits and > memory of 4GB or more is > > > not so rare anymore. Allmost all AM2 MBs > support already 16MB. Even > > > most professionals are not using SCSI > anymore but Sata-II. > > > > I disagree. > > > > I didn't say I agree but probably also only a > matter of time for me > > > SATA (of any gen) still does not perform like > SCSI. Let's just look > > at spindle speed alone ignoring the other > benefits of SCSI. > > > > I had no time to test it on a life webserver > and probably can't do it so soon > but I tell you that a 10K Raptor is faster then > a 15K 320Mb SCSI when > compiling world or untarring large files. Also > NCQ is not reserved to SCSI > anymore so when you see the price then it is > becoming a valid option for > small servers. > > Hans > > > > > > -- > > Prowip Telecom Ltda > AS 22706 > > > > > > > > A mensagem foi scaneada pelo sistema de e-mail > e pode ser considerada segura. > Service fornecido pelo Datacenter Matik > https://datacenter.matik.com.br > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-performance@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-performance > To unsubscribe, send any mail to > "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ freebsd-performance@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-performance To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"