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Yeah, my problem is I don't have a fixed work load in mind. Will be for testing mostly, but also ill probably use it for some personal stuff. That being said it doesn't matter much, because I have decided to cut out the fluff for now and just go with a xeon x3430, basically an i5 with ecc and some additional VT features. now its just a question of how much of the new chipset I can get running on esxi, or if ill just be sticking to opensolaris and xen/xvm. ------Original Message------ From: Shankar Viswanathan Sender: vidyashankar.viswanathan-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org To: jay-R5TnC2l8y5lBDgjK7y7TUQ at public.gmane.org Cc: BLU Subject: Re: ESXi and Xen white box Sent: Oct 26, 2009 10:46 PM On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 8:48 PM, <jay-R5TnC2l8y5lBDgjK7y7TUQ at public.gmane.org> wrote: > Well I've been studying up and it does seem the phenom II x4 is the better option for a vm server. ?The athlon II x4 is the same cpu minus the shared cache. But shared cache is good for vms since they generally don't stick to a single core for long. ?Thus if the data is cached there is only a 1 in 4 chance of the proces being able to access it. ?L3 cache is shared across all processors. ?Unfortunately amd also uses an exclusive cache, and I have not found any info on if this has been optimized some how with amd-v. I'm not sure I understand what you mean by "exclusive cache", but as you mention the L3 cache is shared across all the 4 cores on the Phenom x4 and Phenom II x4. You are also correct that a shared cache is useful for VMs if the hypervisor doesn't employ some sort of core affinity for each guest. But to really say if the shared L3 will provide a big performance benefit, I'd have to know what kinds of applications will be running inside each guest instance. If those applications are memory bound and the working set can fit in the L3, then you'll see a measurable performance difference. -Shankar (* disclaimer: I work for AMD) Sent from my BlackBerry? smartphone with SprintSpeed
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