Also, a true dual-core Xeon is 64-bit. "hyperthreaded" really has one
core and is 32.
-Patrick
On Jun 23, 2008, at 4:38 PM, "Grant Peel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
Two questions for the Web hosting types out there:
1. Does anyone use Celeron based nameservers? (i.e. I have two bran
Celerin is probably fine, I assume you don't have a lot of DNS
traffic. Usually NS2 is on another network...
If its a 64-bit Xeon, AMD would be the right choice. Last gen Xeons
and before... I386. 7.0 has a lot of SMP improvements besides all the
other fixes, features and improvements... Wh
Standard diagnostic rules apply. What does a coredump say? GDB? Did
you remove all modules and readd 1-by-1 to isolate the problem if the
modules are your suspicion? What is the frequency of the crashes?
-Patrick
On May 4, 2008, at 5:01 PM, Chris Maness <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Toomas Aa
What about using a macro (...) in front of the function to csll it
which passes __VARARGS__, NULL to ensure there is always a trailing
NULL? I think this would at least work in GCC... Can' test on my phone
though.
-Patrick
On May 4, 2008, at 4:42 AM, Peter Boosten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
This is a 64-bit platform... Any reasons you're on an i386 kernel? At
the least it would fix your RAM issue.
-Patrick
On May 3, 2008, at 3:56 PM, "Free BSD" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
4 GB physical ram but only 3GB usable via System.
AMD X2 64 3800+ (2 CPUs)
i386 Platform
# pciconf -lv|gre
Correct - a dl380 3.06 is a P4 Xeon, ie the old xeon... 32-bit.
Linux detected that and ran a 32-bit kernel.
-Patrick
On Apr 25, 2008, at 7:24 PM, "Ian Lord" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Ian Lord [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 25 avril 2008 19:39
To: 'free