>> >> On 9/21/11 9:35 AM, Bill Davidsen wrote: >>> Bob Cochran wrote: >>>> I want to build a new computer system that features dual processors, a >>>> lot of memory, and is able to run Xen virtualization. Install >>>> Fedora and >>>> Xen as the host on such a machine, and then start running a variety of >>>> other operating systems as virtual machines. >>>> >>>> What dual processor hardware configurations work well with Xen? For >>>> example will any Supermicro brand dual processor motherboard be >>>> hardware >>>> compatible with Xen? I am thinking of Supermicro boards with Xeon >>>> processors. Or is there a better brand of motherboard? >>>> > There's no question that if you are CPU bound and have lots of tasks > more is better. But that's an unusual case, the load type seen in > scientific calculations and rendering images. For more common loads > memory, storage, or network are often the limiting factor. Since the > original question didn't really make it clear what the load would be > or what budget was available I thought it was worth suggesting an > option leaving more budget for things which may be bottlenecks. > > General questions often get general answers. I'm sorry that my original question.... "What dual processor hardware configurations work well with Xen? For example will any Supermicro brand dual processor motherboard be hardware compatible with Xen? I am thinking of Supermicro boards with Xeon processors. Or is there a better brand of motherboard?" ...lacks specificity. One person did mention an older Asus motherboard as working well. I hope someone out there has Supermicro experience. Perhaps I should check the SuperMicro website more carefully and see if specific boards are also sold by Amazon. Those might have buyer reviews. Bob -- xen mailing list xen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen