If you have more than 4GB of memory, you must use a 64bit kernel or the OS will not use the additional RAM over 4G. On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 10:00 AM, Nathan England wrote: > ** > > > Keith, > > > > You and I have discussed this in the past. I have always been a proponent > of 32-bit over 64-bit because 32 is a little faster.If you have one or two > GB of ram, then that is true. But if the computer has more than 2 GB of ram > it will get some benefits of being 64-bit. But if your system has 4 GB or > more, you will likely notice a speed difference. About a year ago, when I > moved back to linux from windows, I went all 64-bit and I've not had any > troubles. > > > > You may not notice a difference, but your kernel will be happier. The are > three styles of kernels. > > > > (1) 32-bit kernels built for 1 or 2 GB of ram. These kernels do not have > PAE enabled and are very fast. (PAE = Physical Address Extensions) meaning > it allows to use more memory on a 32 bit system which really cannot use > that memory otherwise. It's like fake 64-bit. > > > > (2) 32-bit kernels built for more than 2 GB of ram. These kernels have PAE > enabled. I have read several articles now from people who have done tests, > as well as some reputable websites, that agree that PAE enabled kernels are > the slowest of the bunch. Addressing 64-bit memory space while operating in > a 32-bit environment takes a lot of tricks and creates some over-head. > > > > (3) 64-bit kernels are the fastest in all tests performed. These do not > play the PAE tricks as they are native and can address all memory space > properly. > > > > You as a user may not notice the difference in how any of the kernels > work, so it may be moot to you. But in the end, I would recommend you go > 64-bit anyway. > > > > Nathan > > > > On Friday, May 31, 2013 09:28:01 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 > > > > -- > > > > > > > > Regards, > > > > Nathan England > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > NME Computer Services http://www.nmecs.com > > Nathan England (nathan@nmecs.com) > > Systems Administration / Web Application Development > > Information Security Consulting > > (480) 559.9681 > > > > --------------------------------------------------- > 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 >