> I personally only rarely see 2-way boxes,
> 4-way is pretty rare, and anything more must surely count as very
specialized.
A very large percentage of Dell PowerEdge servers sold with Red Hat Linux,
or used with other distros, have 2 or more processors. We today have
servers with 1, 2, 4, or 8 CPUs, and with the advent of HyperThreading, that
looks like even more. More than two CPUs is not at all uncommon in the
server space. Desktop/notebook space, sure.
Thanks,
Matt
--
Matt Domsch
Sr. Software Engineer
Dell Linux Solutions http://www.dell.com/linux
Linux on Dell mailing lists @ http://lists.us.dell.com
#1 US Linux Server provider for 2001! (IDC Mar 2002)
For the most part, I figure that most application of Linux, ATM, is in
the server space anyway, where 2+ processors are a must.
Also, with 4 procs and HT as Matt mentioned HT below, it will *look*
like 8.(hell, might as well be at this point the way HT seems to work.)
So, the default, as it has been in the past, is for SMP to be Y. It's a
small step to turn it off, but even if you don't, *usually* it doesn't
cause UP boxes much problems.
On Tue, 2002-06-11 at 22:29, [email protected] wrote:
> > I personally only rarely see 2-way boxes,
> > 4-way is pretty rare, and anything more must surely count as very
> specialized.
>
> A very large percentage of Dell PowerEdge servers sold with Red Hat Linux,
> or used with other distros, have 2 or more processors. We today have
> servers with 1, 2, 4, or 8 CPUs, and with the advent of HyperThreading, that
> looks like even more. More than two CPUs is not at all uncommon in the
> server space. Desktop/notebook space, sure.
>
> Thanks,
> Matt
--
Austin Gonyou <[email protected]>