Difference between revisions of "Different kernel flavors (UP, SMP, ENTERPRISE, ENTNOSPLIT)"
(Added info on RHEL flavors) |
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* SMP kernel comes without any flavor (like old UP) | * SMP kernel comes without any flavor (like old UP) | ||
* entnosplit kernel comes as PAE | * entnosplit kernel comes as PAE | ||
− | * enterprise kernel | + | * enterprise kernel comes as ent |
[[Category: Kernel]] | [[Category: Kernel]] | ||
[[Category: Need Categorization]] | [[Category: Need Categorization]] |
Revision as of 08:03, 8 May 2007
OpenVZ project releases several different precompiled kernels for each version. Which kernel to choose depends on what hardware do you have. The table below describes the cases when it is better to use each of these kernels.
Kernel type | Description | Hardware | Use case |
---|---|---|---|
UP | uniprocessor | up to 4GB of RAM | |
SMP | symmetric multiprocessor | up to 4 GB of RAM | 10-20 VPSs |
entnosplit/PAE | SMP + PAE support | up to 64 GB of RAM | 10-30 VPSs |
enterprise | SMP + PAE support + 4/4GB split | up to 64 GB of RAM | >20-30 VPSs |
These kernels are optimized for these types of hardware configurations and usage scenarios,
so choosing the right kernel can help to boost performance by about 5 to 15 per cent.
New RHEL5 based kernel uses different flavors naming. I.e.
- UP kernel is no longer provided
- SMP kernel comes without any flavor (like old UP)
- entnosplit kernel comes as PAE
- enterprise kernel comes as ent