On 05/31/2013 09:28 AM, keith smith wrote: > > Hi, > > Even though I have 64bit hardware I always install the 32bit version of > Linux. I do so because of the past discussions on this list that made > me believe the 32bit OS was better because 64bit caching is actually > slower due to the requirement that the cache be filled to a certain > point before it is moved. I think I recall something about the amount > of RAM having some effect here also. > > Using a 32bit version over a 64bit version seems counter intuitive, > however that is what I have taken away from these conversations about > 32bit vs 64bit Linux. > > I'm using CentOS 6.x on a LAMP server that gets a low amount of > traffic. However I may make the jump to Linux on my desktop this > summer. (this will be my 3rd attempt to become M$ free except one VM so > I can use IE for testing) I think all of my hardware is 64bit. > > So that begs the question, is 32bit better than 64bit or do I not > understand the issue? > > Thank you for your feedback. > > Keith > > ------------------------ > Keith Smith > > > Rule of thumb for servers: use a 64-bit host (PVE for example), and virtualize everything to run under it. Use 32-bit for KVMs unless they need >3G of RAM. OpenVZ contains will of course run 64-bit, as they share the kernel. There are no doubt exceptions to this, but it's a good start. For a LEMP server, you may want to consider separating EMP into 3 separate hosts. Doing it this way, you could have both a PHP51 host and a PHP53 host (LEMPP?), and let your (E)nginx host determine which one to use based on the url (reverse proxy configuration). Having things on a virtual platform opens up a lot of possibilities you don't have otherwise. The list is extensive. :) -- -Eric 'shubes' --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss