Top-post due to prior: VMWare Server 1.x/ Win2K3 server, standalone and as host for above.
VMWare ESXi: Win2K3 and Win2K systems trash volumes. Basically the CPU scaling on the host makes the guest OS fall apart. >-----Original Message----- >From: William Pitcock [mailto:neno...@systeminplace.net] >Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 3:20 PM >To: Tomas L. Byrnes; Kai Chen; na...@merit.edu >Subject: Re: questions about DVFS in saving energy > >Xen handles the AMD HE CPUs just fine here. What sort of breakage are >you experiencing? > >William >------Original Message------ >From: Tomas L. Byrnes >To: Kai Chen >To: na...@merit.edu >Subject: RE: questions about DVFS in saving energy >Sent: May 13, 2009 2:31 PM > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Kai Chen [mailto:kch...@eecs.northwestern.edu] >Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 12:25 PM >To: na...@merit.edu >Subject: questions about DVFS in saving energy > >Hi, could anyone here have some idea of the following questions about >Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling techniques used for energy efficiency, >or please give a pointer that I can trace, >1) how many servers in the market support this technique? >2) how many voltages/frequencies can the servers support? >3) What's the transition time and cost (power) between these >voltages/frequencies? > >Thanks, >-Kai >_______________________________________________________________________ _ >____________________________________ > > >My experience with the AMD HE CPUs has been that the scaling breaks >Win2K3, and any virtualized environments. > > > >-- >William Pitcock >SystemInPlace - Simple Hosting Solutions >1-866-519-6149