It's a pity that raidframe didn't make it into FreeBSD. It seems to be faster than (g)vinum at least for me. I tried gvinum because i wanted to look on gdbe but it didn't seem to be ripe. It lacked several options from "gvinum help" and if used not carefully enough it would crash the whole machine. On the other hand vinum seems to be very stable but hasn't GEOM support.Glad to be of help. Raidframe had been ported to FBSD 5.x, but it was removed because kernel changes broke it, and no one volunteered to fix it. I think gvinum replaced vinum in 5.3 for the same reason. I don't use software raid, so I don't really know.
Good idea, maybe i should install NetBSD in my hair-drier and have the web crowd decide wether my hairs will be dry or wet. :)But NBSD 2.0 is very nice. A company that I do consulting for has just chosen it as the OS for a new embedded product in their pipeline. I've been toying with the idea of idea of web-enabling my toaster by hooking up temperature sensors and a camera, so web surfers could make toast at my house.
A fully controllable house is very nice but it either means a lot of work or a lot of money. It's also quite difficult to "upgrade" an old house because all the walls and floors would have to be ripped open in order to install cabling.I was going to use a 8051 chip and write the code, but maybe I'll use NBSD on an embedded board. (Someday, I may want to add the sprinkler system, pool pump,....)
Trolls are really a plague but i think it's quite calm on this list in regard to some Internet panels. Anyway i hope nobody thought that i'm trolling. :)P.S. (to the list in general) Why do all of the questions about FBSD performance, especially 4.x vs 5.x, come from people posting from Windows boxes? Theories?
In my case i'm using windows because it's pre-installed on the laptop
i use and i never had luck with *bsd/linux on the desktop (and
especially laptops).
This was meant as a humorous question because of certain Windows users' not well-reasoned or -argued posts on this very topic in the last few days.
There are some more points that made me stick with NetBSD and maybe i'll want to come back to FreeBSD when 5.4 is out. However i think that development for NetBSD will make advances too. What SMP, NetBSD and FreeBSD concerns i have to say that i know much more now than when i wrote to the NetBSD mailing list.Different tools for different jobs. Although, in the thread you referenced, you said you were having major SMP problems with NBSD. I hope you get those sorted. Those, I would think, are worse than any network and vinum performance problems. In any event you may wish to check back when 5.4 is released. (No release schedule yet.)
I made some assumptions back then which proved to be wrong. Somebody gave me the hint to have a look at "sysstat vmstat" and i saw that the interrupts grew to an high number on disk i/o. It went a little bit smoother without SMP. I couldn't remember that FreeBSD did so, thus i assumed that it performed better. Checking it again exposed that there was almost the same interrupt behaviour. My apologies for writing emails with unevaluated statements.
You're welcome and see you on the 'net.
stheg
Best Wishes,
Jochen Keil _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"