Hi oe1 (ew, that could also spell Outlook Express 1!)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > how do i know both cores are being used on my amd dual core terminal server? From the command line, you could run: $ cat /proc/cpuinfo It will show you a detailed report of your CPU. From Gnome, you can also click on System -> Administration -> System Monitor. On the resources tab it will show a graph of total CPU usage, and the number of CPU's will be displayed right below the graph. I like using htop (you'll have to install the htop package first though) to view processes and CPU load. Your mileage may vary :) > i ran into this edubuntu testimonial > > http://manueldublan.org/computerlab/ > > and noticed the following comment... > > "We setup edubunut to run with a smp kernel to use the power of both cores > and that makes a huge difference." > > how does that apply to gutsy and hardy? They should both give you smp kernels by default. The only kernel that doesn't give you SMP, afaik, is the plain old -i386 kernel. To check your running kernel, type: $ uname -a If it's -generic or -server, then you'll be fine. HTH -Jonathan -- edubuntu-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-users
