Re: tuning a system for a single user

2011-04-04 Thread Adam Vande More
On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Eitan Adler wrote: > > I believe no FreeBSD system is "single user". As root, daemon users, > > system users, "nobody" is required for running system smoothly, > > securely and easy, so scheduling is nessecary :) > > Obviously :-) > > I guess a better way to ask t

Re: tuning a system for a single user

2011-04-04 Thread Eitan Adler
On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 9:42 AM, Kristaps Kūlis wrote: > Hi, >  I believe no FreeBSD system is "single user". As root, daemon users, > system users, "nobody" is required for running system smoothly, > securely and easy, so scheduling is nessecary :) Obviously :-) I guess a better way to ask the q

Re: tuning a system for a single user

2011-04-04 Thread Kristaps Kūlis
Hi, I believe no FreeBSD system is "single user". As root, daemon users, system users, "nobody" is required for running system smoothly, securely and easy, so scheduling is nessecary :) Quotas / MAC / Auditing can be disabled by compiling your own kernel, please refer to handbook for futher info.

Re: tuning a system for a single user

2011-04-03 Thread Peter Ulrich Kruppa
On Fri, 1 Apr 2011, Eitan Adler wrote: When I look for tuning guides online, or reading tuning(7) I find a lot of guides for tuning a system for multiple users or for specific purposes (web servers, file servers, etc) I am looking for specific tunables that might make the experience of using Fr

tuning a system for a single user

2011-04-01 Thread Eitan Adler
When I look for tuning guides online, or reading tuning(7) I find a lot of guides for tuning a system for multiple users or for specific purposes (web servers, file servers, etc) I am looking for specific tunables that might make the experience of using FreeBSD better. I found the sysctl kern.maxu