On Thu, 14 Apr 2011 05:14:37 -0500, Dennis Nikiforov
wrote:
There is a legacy piece of custom software that runs only on 32 bit
systems, so going to 64 bit is not possible.
Run it in a 32bit jail. PAE has never been very stable/reliable.
Regards,
Mark
__
On 14/04/2011 12:14, Dennis Nikiforov wrote:
There is a legacy piece of custom software that runs only on 32 bit systems, so
going to 64 bit is not possible.
Some ideas:
1) You can run 32-bit applications on 64-bit FreeBSD (and / or set up a
32-bit jail)
2) You can try booting a snapshot of
Well, the idea was to run many instances of the app (each process does not need
more than a couple of gigs of ram). Using virtualization is another option, but
it will require a lot more maintenance of every VM. It would be a lot better if
a single OS can use PAE.
On Apr 14, 2011, at 3:47 PM, k
On 14 April 2011 11:14, Dennis Nikiforov wrote:
> There is a legacy piece of custom software that runs only on 32 bit
> systems, so going to 64 bit is not possible.
>
> On Apr 14, 2011, at 12:08 PM, krad wrote:
>
>
>
> On 14 April 2011 08:05, Dennis Nikiforov wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>>I hav
There is a legacy piece of custom software that runs only on 32 bit systems, so
going to 64 bit is not possible.
On Apr 14, 2011, at 12:08 PM, krad wrote:
>
>
> On 14 April 2011 08:05, Dennis Nikiforov wrote:
> Hello,
>
>I have a problem with FreeBSD 7.x 32bit running the standard PA
On 14 April 2011 08:05, Dennis Nikiforov wrote:
> Hello,
>
>I have a problem with FreeBSD 7.x 32bit running the standard PAE
> kernel on a dell R210 server with 16GB of RAM. All servers spec'ed like this
> have the same identical problem and it is not a hardware issue because all
> memory
Hello,
I have a problem with FreeBSD 7.x 32bit running the standard PAE kernel
on a dell R210 server with 16GB of RAM. All servers spec'ed like this have the
same identical problem and it is not a hardware issue because all memory tests
have been negative.
basically the issue c