LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
I am getting a new computer. Haven't decided on one yet, but I'm currently looking at a dual-xeon (Dell SC1420). I'm would dual boot it with Windows 2003 Server, but I am looking for a Linux distro with good performance and reliability running mutiple processors.
I've been using Ubuntu on my current computer and it's served me well. But I haven't tried any Linux distro's using multiple processors.
I'm sure there are people with relevant experience on here. Suggestions? Advice? 5/10/2006 12:47:23 AM |
MiniMe_877 All American 4414 Posts user info edit post |
I've used SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 (SLES9) and RedHat Enterprise Linux 4 (RHEL4) here at work, we use it on all our multi-processor servers. Those are two of the big name enterprise class linux distros.
why are you getting the dell dual-xeon machine? are you running it as a server? 5/10/2006 10:52:51 AM |
tjoshea All American 4906 Posts user info edit post |
just stick with ubuntu it should be able to handle SMP fine... 5/10/2006 2:05:18 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
^^It's going to be a MythTV backend (record, flag commercials, transcode) primarily. I may stick as many as 4 tuners in there. I will use it to run some scientific codes as well, among other things. 5/11/2006 12:00:22 AM |
smoothcrim Universal Magnetic! 18966 Posts user info edit post |
the kernel is the same for all of them, so any distro is gonna be fine 5/11/2006 2:30:56 AM |
mellocj All American 1872 Posts user info edit post |
The SC1420 is louder than a desktop computer - the case is pretty large too. I wouldn't want that sitting next to my TV. 5/11/2006 9:18:51 AM |
eraser All American 6733 Posts user info edit post |
^ if it is a backend it should be "hiding" in a closet. I will have my MythTV backend in a closet - the frontend/client is what needs to be quiet.
Quote : | "just stick with ubuntu it should be able to handle SMP fine..." |
I agree with that. Ubuntu offers SMP kernels and you can compile your own custom SMP kernel. It is ridiculously easy.5/11/2006 9:32:43 AM |