On Monday 10 March 2003 19:52, Michael Stack uttered: > I've come to understand that better HT support hinges at least in part on > the compiler. Also, while Linux may support HT "out of the box", I believe > the real performance gains come when kernels are specifically written to > take advantage of HT. A single 3.06 MHz HT processor isn't the same as two > separate non-HT 3.06 MHz processors, so specific kernel optimizations may > also be necessary to realize the true benefit of HT. Those more familiar > with HT, especially as it relates to Linux, are encouraged to correct > whatever I may have just pulled out of my a55. :) No HT enabled CPU will be the same as 2 physical processors. HT is just a second set of processing gates on the CPU. The cache and other items are shared between the 2 sets of processing gates, so it's quite less of an enhancement than a second physical CPU. That said, it is more (some times quite a bit) power than a single CPU w/out HT. -- Jesse Keating RHCE MCSE http://geek.j2solutions.net Mondo DevTeam (www.mondorescue.org) Was I helpful? Let others know: http://svcs.affero.net/rm.php?r=jkeating -- Psyche-list mailing list Psyche-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/psyche-list