On Tue, 2010-03-16 at 11:05 +0200, Avi Kivity wrote: > > Not really. In many cloud environments, there's a set of common > > images that are instantiated on each node. Usually this is because > > you're running a horizontally scalable application or because you're > > supporting an ephemeral storage model. > > But will these servers actually benefit from shared cache? So the > images are shared, they boot up, what then? > > - apache really won't like serving static files from the host pagecache > - dynamic content (java, cgi) will be mostly in anonymous memory, not > pagecache > - ditto for application servers > - what else are people doing? Think of an OpenVZ-style model where you're renting out a bunch of relatively tiny VMs and they're getting used pretty sporadically. They either have relatively little memory, or they've been ballooned down to a pretty small footprint. The more you shrink them down, the more similar they become. You'll end up having things like init, cron, apache, bash and libc start to dominate the memory footprint in the VM. That's *certainly* a case where this makes a lot of sense. -- Dave -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html