:Most of the speed difference is WITNESS, INVARIANTS, and other :debugging code that's turned on by default in the config files :for -current. You can turn most of it off. That said, -current :is slower than -stable in a number of places, so expect some :slowdown, if you are running non-concurrent code.
I would concur with this diagnosis. With witness turned off -current is around 15% slower then -stable for general purpose computing, like a 'make buildworld -j 20', and I expect that -stable will beat out -current on single-cpu boxes for a long time to come. That said, it should be noted that nearly all the really cool development projects are only happening in -current. Things like KSEs, hardware crypto support, UFS2, and so forth, only exist in -current. Very little of this work is going to be MFC'd so depending on your needs -current could very well end up faster. And, of course, there is the fact that computing power seems to double every year. Since -current's overhead is in large part due to mutexes and other concurrency mechanisms, and these are literally pure-cpu mechanisms rather then memory or I/O dependant, decisions should be based on capability rather then something as insignificant as a 15% performance difference between the 'rough cut' -current and the well aged -stable. In coming years concurrency is going to become the leading performance-improving mechanism for computers. -Matt To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message