On 14.05.2014 16:09, Bogdan Iosif wrote:
My opinion is that Redhat/CentOS or Ubuntu LTS (based on Debian, I know)
are more likely to have the best performing drivers and the most tested
and stable configurations, compared with other distros. Thus, I wouldn't
stray from those for prod systems. Then again, I'm no Linux expert and I
don't want to start a holly war about which distro is the best. Your choice.

Before going into Linux, I did read about which distro to use. I stopped at Debian as it is more standard compliant, straight forward and stable. Redhat is not fully open. CentOS seemed too complicated. And Ubuntu were performing slower than Debian. But I don't imply on Debian. Its just main distro I use for now.

Face it, your hardware is very old. I'm not one to not understand a lack
of resources (believe me) but we're taking a single core CPU that was
launched 8-9 years ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_Xeon_microprocessors#.22Irwindale.22_.2890_nm.29
I don't know if you have 2x CPUs but, even then, your CPU power is very
very low if I got the CPU model correctly.

Well, of course its not modern CPUs I know that. But I use what we have. Then its just CPU a bottleneck now, not which distro and how much bits. First - when boss will ask for performance, let him buy new hardware first. :)

Thanks for guiding. I could find that options in apache to tweak, so performance in other application increased.


--
Mimiko desu.
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