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Date:      Sun, 17 Jun 2001 12:36:28 -0400
From:      Sergey Babkin <babkin@bellatlantic.net>
To:        Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com>
Cc:        "Albert D. Cahalan" <acahalan@cs.uml.edu>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG, mhagerty@voyager.net
Subject:   Re: Article: Network performance by OS
Message-ID:  <3B2CDC8C.3C7E382A@bellatlantic.net>
References:  <200106162031.f5GKVfm16209@saturn.cs.uml.edu> <200106162104.f5GL4dX02015@earth.backplane.com>

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Matt Dillon wrote:
> 
>     A person who depends on the ability to run an out-of-the-box solution
>     into the ground and actually expects it to perform well without having
>     to know the first thing about the platform he is running his software
>     on is a complete and utter idiot and the company that employs such a
>     person has a hellofalot more to worry about then the performance of an
>     untuned machine.

We are telling people that FreeBSD is primarily a good server OS, 
right ? Then it should come with the standard configuration tuned
with this purpose in mind. Not "foolproof", not "workstation" but
"high-performance server".

IMHO this is a big problem with too many Unix (including Linux)
and generally Open Source programs and systems. They allow to
do great things after being properly tuned. However the default
configuration supplied with them is utterly horrible by some
mysterious reason. So the learning curve for them is quite steep
and requires to learn the product in deep and tune it before
using. Well, I do enjoy learning things, however tuning the
same things in each new version over and over again for the 10th 
time becomes quite boring.

This is not to say that Windows is better: the default
configurations are usually slightly better but there is no
[reasonably easy] way whatsoever to make them decent.

-SB

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