This is kinda new to me - Just so I am clear - unganged systems would perform better if I have say - a caching system with limited threads each pined to a specific core (we do this for processor cache anyway) while ganged systems would perform better it I was spinning up a new thread for each request and had a large amount (say 768GB) of ram running something like PostgreSQL where threads are being fired up and down many thousands of times a second but the data they seek is mostly in main memory.


On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 1:36 PM, Stephen <cryptworks@gmail.com> wrote:
On-board bios usually will not allocate that much however. And by usually will not I mean I have never sen it do so, even in the days of ghetto ram thieving by graphics chip-sets.


On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 12:29 PM, Eric Shubert <ejs@shubes.net> wrote:
On 06/03/2013 01:46 PM, Nathan England wrote:
But why does CentOS not register all of my memory? Why less than 3/4 of it?

Perhaps the bios has allocated a chunk of it to onboard video?

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-Eric 'shubes'
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