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Date:      Sat, 10 May 2008 09:44:52 +0200 (CEST)
From:      Wojciech Puchar <wojtek@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl>
To:        Matthew Seaman <m.seaman@infracaninophile.co.uk>
Cc:        DAve <dave.list@pixelhammer.com>, 'User Questions' <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: FBSD 6.2 Xeon 2.4ghz CPU and high load
Message-ID:  <20080510094220.T58841@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl>
In-Reply-To: <48254EAB.3030103@infracaninophile.co.uk>
References:  <482473B7.7070707@pixelhammer.com> <48248AC9.5060507@infracaninophile.co.uk> <20080509202941.J53368@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> <4824CEE7.6070605@infracaninophile.co.uk> <20080510090439.U58698@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> <48254EAB.3030103@infracaninophile.co.uk>

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>> but just run 100 different things and check how responsive machine is.
>
> My experience is of dealing with servers where each machine typically has
> a small number of important applications -- frequently only /one/ application

so why you need unix at all? :)


> I can't speak to the model of needing to run hundreds of different

what is what i do. put everything on one server, only dividing things on 
many when one is unable to cope (very rare case).

> applications on the same server -- about the closest thing I have to that
> is my personal laptop (but only dozens of apps, rather than hundreds), and
> other than being vaguely aware that it seems to be working adequately, I've

try as simple and stupid thing under load

cat /dev/zero >somefile (on big partition)

on 6.* and 7.* and compare both cases.

:)



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