Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2004 11:20:39 -0600 From: D J Hawkey Jr <hawkeyd@visi.com> To: Tony Frank <tfrank@optushome.com.au> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Clarification needed on Handbook: Tracking for Multiple Machines Message-ID: <20040222172039.GA25979@sheol.localdomain> In-Reply-To: <20040222161211.GB35539@marvin.home.local> References: <20040221160709.GA22447@sheol.localdomain> <1455334090.20040221175633@buz.ch> <20040221172328.GA22671@sheol.localdomain> <20040222140538.GA16873@marvin.home.local> <20040222150723.GA25548@sheol.localdomain> <20040222161211.GB35539@marvin.home.local>
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OK, I've cross-posted this message to -hackers, to see if we can get some sort of definitive [to me] answer. Please forgive if it's considered bad form. -hackers: There is a thread in -questions in response to my query as to building the world and kernels for a variety of Intel CPUs on one machine. For brevity's sake, I won't reproduce the entire thread here. OK, I guess my question boils down to these, then: True or False: Setting CPUTYPE to the lowest target CPU ("p2") in a build machine's make.conf will cripple the performance of target machines with higher CPUs ("p3", "p4", "i586", "i686", etc.). If "True", for optimized code across all machines, the code should just be built on each machine, right? Thanks, Dave -- ______________________ ______________________ \__________________ \ D. J. HAWKEY JR. / __________________/ \________________/\ hawkeyd@visi.com /\________________/ http://www.visi.com/~hawkeyd/
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