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Date:      Wed, 21 Jan 2004 13:38:34 -0500
From:      Jeremy Faulkner <gldisater@gldis.ca>
To:        Joerg Pernfuss <elessar@galgenberg.net>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Using FreeBSD to burn in computers
Message-ID:  <400EC72A.1020801@gldis.ca>
In-Reply-To: <20040121170912.4f1bc946@aragorn>
References:  <5.2.0.9.0.20040120145720.02132688@mail.auracom.com> <u2soesxxu1n.fsf@gs166.sp.cs.cmu.edu> <20040121170912.4f1bc946@aragorn>

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Joerg Pernfuss wrote:
> On 21 Jan 2004 09:20:20 -0500
> Dan Pelleg <daniel+bsd@pelleg.org> wrote:
> 
> 
>>>[...]
>>>b)make world; make world; make world; make world; make world (my
>>>idea here is to run make world and make on XFree86 concurrently,
>>>thus stressing the system further - I'm not sure if this is a good
>>>idea or not, but I'm sure someone will correct me.)
>>
>>
>>Have make start up many compiles in parallel with the -j switch: for
>>example "make -j3". My rule of thumb for a most-effective make is 3
>>times the number of processor. You will probably want a higher number
>>just so the strain on memory and disk is higher.
> 
> 
> For his purpose of stress testing the memory:
> make -j64 buildkernel
> 
> I use this on dual proc boxes, maybe -j32 is already more than enough
> for a single cpu.
> 
> Won't work with less than 128MiByte RAM iirc, but so far I haven't seen
> something different that puts that much stress on your memory.
> Surviving this two or three times in a row you can label your RAM
> `non-faulty'.
> 
> Joerg

Or he could just use memtest (ports/sysutils/memtest)

-- 
Jeremy Faulkner				http://www.gldis.ca



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