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Date:      Mon, 22 Jan 1996 05:10:05 -0800
From:      David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
To:        Greg Lehey <lehey.pad@sni.de>
Cc:        hackers@freebsd.org (Hackers; FreeBSD)
Subject:   Re: stanford benchmark/usenix 
Message-ID:  <199601221310.FAA14741@Root.COM>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Mon, 22 Jan 1996 13:58:56 %2B0700." <199601221302.OAA11824@nixpbe.pdb.sni.de> 

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>Yes, I thought of that.  The alterneative of being able to run the
>versions on all processors rather defeats the advantage: I had thought

   Not at all. Most of the optimizations that can be made don't use
CPU-specific instructions. It's all in just organizing the instructions
a little differently are making some algorithmic changes to take better
advantage of difference cache quirks.

>of a part of the system startup that checks the processor type and
>puts in the correct hard links (symlinks are slower) before any
>program gets started.  It would probably be a good idea to have an
>emergency program which reinstated the generic libraries, too.

   Not necessary.

-DG

David Greenman
Core Team/Principal Architect, The FreeBSD Project



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