[Pkg-xen-devel] Re: Bug#390862: -bigmem version of xen kernels is
really needed
Pasi Kärkkäinen
pasik at iki.fi
Wed Dec 13 08:36:28 CET 2006
On Wed, Dec 13, 2006 at 09:19:12AM +0200, Pasi Kärkkäinen wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 12, 2006 at 03:59:13PM +0100, Ralph Passgang wrote:
> > Am Dienstag, 12. Dezember 2006 10:54 schrieb Nikita V. Youshchenko:
> > > What about idea not to *add* pae versions of xen kernels, but to *replace*
> > > non-pae versions with pae versions?
> >
> > I don't think that debian should ship only pae-enabled kernels, because this
> > has some disadvantages:
> >
> > - the slowdown, even if it's minimal, I personaly don't want to get forced to
> > use it.
> >
> > - only pae-enabled system can use xen in 32bit mode, cpu's without pae cannot
> > use xen at all! Not every cpu/bios is able to handle pae.
> > (see "cat /proc/cpuinfo" for your cpu and check your bios settings if you are
> > not sure).
> >
> > - I had some trouble with pae on standard server hardware (in combination with
> > xen) in the past. I think pae can make your system less stable (in rare
> > cases).
> >
> > My personal conclussion: pae is only a dirty hack. use it if you must,
> > otherwise a non pae-enabled kernel/os is better.
> >
> > I think debian should normal AND pae-enabled kernels, or maybe have the kernel
> > decice that on boottime automaticly (if that's possible).
> >
> > ah, and I don't get the "distribution compatibiltiy" point.
> > If your domU system is debian based, then you will use the non-pae kernel from
> > etch and all your domUs also can use the same kernel. It doesn't matter if
> > domU is also debian or fedora or something else, they should work with a
> > debian kernel...
> > The same is true for a dom0 based on fedora and debian as domU. Use the same
> > kernel (the one that gets shipped with the dom0 distribution) and use that
> > for your debian domUs, too.
> >
> > For compatibility it's more important that every distribution uses udev (for
> > example) and not the depricated hotplug system.
> >
> > just my 5 cent ;-P
> >
> > --Ralph
> >
>
> I see it differently; I would like to use distribution/vendor provided
> kernels as much as possible.. saves from a lot of headaches. Redhat/fedora
> kernels for example have a lot of features/patches you don't (yet) have in
> vanilla or debian kernels..
>
Not directly related to this, but this is why redhat decided to go for
pae-only:
https://www.redhat.com/archives/rhelv5-beta-list/2006-December/msg00068.html
"the decision to only support PAE capable hosts was made at the end of the
FC5 cycle. The majority (if not all) of server in customer
datacenters/environments are PAE capable today and the only edge case for
non-PAE support would have been "older" laptops which do not yet have PAE
capable processors. It also would have been an additional burden for QA/QE
to test/certify older non-PAE capable servers. As the use case for Xen is
certainly geared towards servers and not laptops this made a lot of sense."
-- Pasi
^
. .
Linux
/ - \
Choice.of.the
.Next.Generation.
More information about the Pkg-xen-devel
mailing list