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Date:      Wed, 23 Jul 1997 21:30:05 -0400 (EDT)
From:      <david@sparks.net>
To:        Victor Manuel Carranza Gonzalez <victor@usac.edu.gt>
Cc:        FreeBSD Questions mailing list <questions@freefall.freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: SMP: Should I abandon FreeBSD? :-(
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSI.3.95.970723212507.25810F-100000@sparks.net>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.OSF.3.96.970723181528.4964C-100000@ns.usac.edu.gt>

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On Wed, 23 Jul 1997, Victor Manuel Carranza Gonzalez wrote:

> Hello, everybody!
> 
> I am just wondering if my totally-happy-FreeBSD-user days are coming to an
> end. I need to instal a couple of servers, with two 200 MHz Pentium Pro
> processors each one; but I'm not sure about the idea of using
> FreeBSD-current (the only tree including SMP) for a serious application...
> you know... I don't want the system crashing unexplainably, or any
> sort of weird behaviour (I plan to use PostgreSQL and manage big databases
> on those servers).

Does PostgreSQL benefit from having multiple processors?  It's not safe to
assume it does, IMHO.  It also may not even work properly.

> Please give me some advise... Should I try another free OS? 9if so, which
> one?)  Or should I stick with FreeBSD and take the risk of running
> -current?  (If I can't find a suitable free OS, I will probably be another
> victim of Bill Gates; so, please HELP :-) 

I don't know of any robust and free combinations of OS and RDBMS.  I
personally think you might re-examine whether you really need multiple
CPU's.  Going to NT isn't likely to help - my understanding is that it's
so slow and inefficient to start with that plugging in 2-4 processors is
required just to get even with a good single processor unix box.

Mind you now, this advice is worth every penney you paid for it, and if
you're lucky a few more:)

If you want to stick with the PC architecture, solaris X86 and oracle is
probably your most powerful combination.


--- David Miller


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