Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Need Good Configuration For RHEL Virtualization Desktop Post 302795171 by freebird8z on Wednesday 17th of April 2013 11:28:47 AM
Old 04-17-2013
- First, please use correct/ full english syntax in any forums like this. You are being judged by the type of language you use. (No offense).

- For desktop virtualization, select any CPU which supports VT-x and if possible (optional though) hyperthreading. But hyperthreading suppot CPUs are normally expensive - so you can safely go for VT-x supported CPU. A quad core CPU (with VT-X) is what I suggest for this purpose.
This User Gave Thanks to freebird8z For This Post:
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Saving Desktop configuration

How can I save my desktop configurations?? (background, wallpaper, etc) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ulisses0205
2 Replies

2. Gentoo

New Desktop Configuration

Hi Guys, I dont know if this is the right thread to post this but i didnt find a better category. I am planning to buy a new desktop and i would need your suggestions for that. The desktop will be mainly for 1) FPS and MMORPG gaming in Windows (Quake, UT and WOW) 2) Linux for programming... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: s4g3
3 Replies

3. Virtualization and Cloud Computing

virtualization in RHEL 5.3 & Centos 5.3

Hi I would like to know how to do virtualization in Rhel 5.3 and Cent os 5.3, As i am new this Virtualization need guidence how to install and configure guest os in Rhel and Cent Os can some one guide me step by step Regards Solaris8in (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: solaris8in
1 Replies

4. Red Hat

NTP Configuration on RHEL 5.4

Hi, I'm trying to configure NTP client, however it failes to sync correctly. Even after I manually set the time, once it connects with the NTP server, it pushes the time ahead by 4 hours. We have set an AIX host as NTP server. It works fine for other AIX hosts, however fails on RHEL 5.4 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: max_min
4 Replies

5. Solaris

Last good configuration

If the OS is messed up with new COTS and we would like to go back to the last good configuration what are options available? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sam101
2 Replies

6. Red Hat

RHEL 6.0 net configuration

hello, I have installed RHEL 6.0 on my lappy in a separate partion with windows 7 on the hardware(not using VMWARE).Now kindly help me to active network configuration in that?????Is it require to have LINUX wireless drivers???? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dillipkmrpadhy
1 Replies

7. Red Hat

RIP configuration in RHEL 6.3

Hi, Can someone please help me configuring RIP (Routing Information Protocol v2 ). I have tried few manuals and posts from networking sites and i didnt get a clear picture. This is what i have done: 1. Installed routed package and started routed service. however, Dynamic routes are... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: reddybs
1 Replies

8. Red Hat

How to configure DNS configuration for RHEL 5?

I wanted to know how to configure DNS configuration for RHEL 5. I hope, my query is clear of how to setup DNS for RHEL 5. Please revert with the reply to my query Regards (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: RHCE
6 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Snmptrapd configuration on rhel 8

I need to configure snmptrap on rhel 8 server and send trap to nimsoft for file system , memory and cpu load and network diconnection status. please help me, if any one configured. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yash_message
1 Replies
SMP(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						    SMP(4)

NAME
SMP -- description of the FreeBSD Symmetric Multi-Processor kernel SYNOPSIS
options SMP DESCRIPTION
The SMP kernel implements symmetric multi-processor support. COMPATIBILITY
Support for multi-processor systems is present for all Tier-1 architectures on FreeBSD. Currently, this includes amd64, i386 and sparc64. Support is enabled using options SMP. It is permissible to use the SMP kernel configuration on non-SMP equipped motherboards. I386 NOTES For i386 systems, the SMP kernel supports motherboards that follow the Intel MP specification, version 1.4. In addition to options SMP, i386 also requires device apic. The mptable(1) command may be used to view the status of multi-processor support. The number of CPUs detected by the system is available in the read-only sysctl variable hw.ncpu. FreeBSD allows specific CPUs on a multi-processor system to be disabled. This can be done using the hint.lapic.X.disabled tunable, where X is the APIC ID of a CPU. Setting this tunable to 1 will result in the corresponding CPU being disabled. The sched_ule(4) scheduler implements CPU topology detection and adjusts the scheduling algorithms to make better use of modern multi-core CPUs. The sysctl variable kern.sched.topology_spec reflects the detected CPU hardware in a parsable XML format. The top level XML tag is <groups>, which encloses one or more <group> tags containing data about individual CPU groups. A CPU group contains CPUs that are detected to be "close" together, usually by being cores in a single multi-core processor. Attributes available in a <group> tag are "level", corre- sponding to the nesting level of the CPU group and "cache-level", corresponding to the level of CPU caches shared by the CPUs in the group. The <group> tag contains the <cpu> and <flags> tags. The <cpu> tag describes CPUs in the group. Its attributes are "count", corresponding to the number of CPUs in the group and "mask", corresponding to the integer binary mask in which each bit position set to 1 signifies a CPU belonging to the group. The contents (CDATA) of the <cpu> tag is the comma-delimited list of CPU indexes (derived from the "mask" attribute). The <flags> tag contains special tags (if any) describing the relation of the CPUs in the group. The possible flags are cur- rently "HTT" and "SMT", corresponding to the various implementations of hardware multithreading. An example topology_spec output for a sys- tem consisting of two quad-core processors is: <groups> <group level="1" cache-level="0"> <cpu count="8" mask="0xff">0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7</cpu> <flags></flags> <children> <group level="2" cache-level="0"> <cpu count="4" mask="0xf">0, 1, 2, 3</cpu> <flags></flags> </group> <group level="2" cache-level="0"> <cpu count="4" mask="0xf0">4, 5, 6, 7</cpu> <flags></flags> </group> </children> </group> </groups> This information is used internally by the kernel to schedule related tasks on CPUs that are closely grouped together. FreeBSD supports hyperthreading on Intel CPU's on the i386 and AMD64 platforms. Because using logical CPUs can cause performance penalties under certain loads, the logical CPUs can be disabled by setting the machdep.hyperthreading_allowed tunable to zero. SEE ALSO
cpuset(1), mptable(1), sched_4bsd(4), sched_ule(4), loader(8), sysctl(8), condvar(9), msleep(9), mtx_pool(9), mutex(9), rwlock(9), sema(9), sx(9) HISTORY
The SMP kernel's early history is not (properly) recorded. It was developed in a separate CVS branch until April 26, 1997, at which point it was merged into 3.0-current. By this date 3.0-current had already been merged with Lite2 kernel code. FreeBSD 5.0 introduced support for a host of new synchronization primitives, and a move towards fine-grained kernel locking rather than reliance on a Giant kernel lock. The SMPng Project relied heavily on the support of BSDi, who provided reference source code from the fine- grained SMP implementation found in BSD/OS. FreeBSD 5.0 also introduced support for SMP on the sparc64 architecture. AUTHORS
Steve Passe <fsmp@FreeBSD.org> BSD
May 7, 2008 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:34 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy