it's got nothing to do with the program you are running, the OS is what takes care of which CPU is used. The OS is supposed to split the load evenly among all available processors, though it's not always perfect in execution. You shouldn't have to set affinity yourself, but it is an option worth trying to see how it goes.
On 7/21/05, [BIATCH]Tef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > I was finding that with a CS:S and a CS 1.6 game on the same server (dual > AMD) that the first processor tended to get loaded and the second was > practially idle. Have set processor affinity last night and waiting to > see if it makes any difference now. > > Should 1.6 automatically switch to the send cpu, or is it just cs:s? > > To answer the original post, I use firedemon and in the "advanced" options > you can set processor affinity for each service separately. > > Tef -- Clayton Macleod _______________________________________________ To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, please visit: http://list.valvesoftware.com/mailman/listinfo/hlds