On Sat, 5 Sep 2009, mike wrote:
The life is fast ebbing from debian/m68k as far as I can tell. I'm not
sure if there is sufficient energy to revitalize it. I'd be delighted
to be proven wrong.
Yep sad isnt it, one hope for the port is that several amigans ( trough
natami ) and atarians ( trough the coldfire atari project) or otherwise
some miracle happens at freescale and thereby more people see a reason
to run debian on their 68k's,
Question is tho, as the kernel gets more bloated and slower as time
passes, and the packages that run on top, will it even be usable on
those in a few...
I haven't seen anyone test for kernel performance regressions on m68k
(other than the scheduler regression) -- let alone work on reversing them.
Probably because of the usual shortage of skills.
Netbsd seems to have a fast kernel. from what little i've booted of
it...
You have to pick the right architecture. In Linux (the kernel) algorithms
are tuned for the common case, which is x86. And hence you'd expect a
Linux operating system's performance to be competitive with any equivalent
operating system running on that architecture.
Having said that, kernel performance even on x86 is quite variable from
one release to another:
http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=linux_2629_benchmarks&num=9
Of course, benchmarks on Intel architectures should not be taken as
representative of m68k performance. It would be informative to build and
run a benchmark suite like that one on debian etch-m68k (it has gcc 3.3
and 4.1) using the latest kernel.
Finn
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