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Date:      Sat, 16 Feb 2008 11:37:21 +0000
From:      Thomas Hurst <tom.hurst@clara.net>
To:        Dag-Erling Sm?rgrav <des@des.no>
Cc:        Ian FREISLICH <ianf@clue.co.za>, Ken Smith <kensmith@cse.Buffalo.EDU>, freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD 7.0-RC2 Available
Message-ID:  <20080216113721.GA55702@voi.aagh.net>
In-Reply-To: <86r6fdx0tf.fsf@ds4.des.no>
References:  <rea-fbsd@codelabs.ru> <HNc5KTwAOlChZd/l%2BN1vPPiVFRE@3SQePivZkcJXerr/O1l2SLu1NoU> <E1JPD3j-0000wk-6u@clue.co.za> <msJHdNXRu5fGqwNIwehl3Qsvvmg@L/B2HsSNkA3O1ZRIaMxnTL95W%2Bo> <86r6fdx0tf.fsf@ds4.des.no>

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* Dag-Erling Sm?rgrav (des@des.no) wrote:

> Not cost-effective?  What is the "street price" of 16 GB disk space
> these days?  About the same as a couple of Big Macs?

That's roughly half of a common 36G SCSI drive, and still a fairly
significant chunk of a 73G one.  Granted, you probably don't get all
that many high-memory systems with just one or two dinky disks.

For us, our systems with the most memory have little need for much
storage or IO; they have a pair of mirrored 73G SAS drives and 20G of
memory; they currently run with 2G of swap, which if they ever have to
use, will make them useless.  Blowing 30% of available local storage on
swap doesn't really make sense; we're much more likely to have 20G
application cores than kernel ones.

Speaking of, it'd be really nice if you could interrupt the generation
of coredumps; big ones take a while.  Perhaps the dump loop could check
kern.coredump every few thousand pages and exit early if it's 0?

-- 
Thomas 'Freaky' Hurst
    http://hur.st/



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