On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 3:01 PM, Juan J. Fernandez
<j...@tcpapplication.com> wrote:
> In general, you could achieve performance by configuring your kernel
> according to your hardware. You can use dmesg(8) and 'GENERIC' kernel
> configuration as a guide for your hardware.

That's bad advice.  When you run a non-standard kernel and something
goes wrong, the *first* response will be "does it happen on a GENERIC
kernel?  What are the symptoms, backtrace, etc there?"   And what
changes are you suggesting would make a *performance* difference?
Have you been drinking the kool-aid over at that c*l*mel site?


> Sometimes i386 will run faster than 64 bit (see
> http://www.openbsd.org/amd64.html).

I see nothing on that page to suggest that.


Philip Guenther

Reply via email to