In meinem McBook Pro late 2008 ist ein Intel Core 2 Duo 2,4 GHz verbaut.
Wie viele Cores darf/soll man den maximal einer VM zuweisen?
Hintergrund - ich teste momentan OpenIndiana (free Solaris), das benötigt ziemlich laaaange zum Hochfahren, auch sonst seeehr laaaangsam.
TrueOS (FreeBSD), LinuxMint kommen mit einem Core locker aus, Windows 10 könnte auch einen Zweiten brauchen, ist aber nicht so langsam wie OpenIndiana
Als HD ist im Mac eine SSD eingebaut!
PS: Vom VMware Fusion weiß ich - verbaute Cores -1 - das meckert wenn man alle zuweist.
PPS: Soll ich in OpenIndiana die VirtualBox Solaris 'Guest Additions' überhaupt installieren? Funktionieren diese?
Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
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Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Nice greetings
Fritz
Fritz
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
According to the Mactracker, you have the 15" MacBookPro5,1 with the Intel Core 2 Duo P8600. According to Intel, this CPU has 2 cores with no hyper-threading. Therefore, you should be assigning 1 core to each VM.[color=#BF6000]DeepL translator[/color] wrote: DE: In meinem McBook Pro late 2008 ist ein Intel Core 2 Duo 2,4 GHz verbaut. Wie viele Cores darf/soll man den maximal einer VM zuweisen?
EN: My McBook Pro late 2008 has an Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHz installed. What is the maximum number of cores that can/should be assigned to one VM?
Since for the last several years there have not been single-core offerings any more, most modern day OSes are going to have a hard time with 1 core only.[color=#BF6000]DeepL translator[/color] wrote: DE: ich teste momentan OpenIndiana (free Solaris), das benötigt ziemlich laaaange zum Hochfahren, auch sonst seeehr laaaangsam.
EN: I'm currently testing OpenIndiana (free Solaris), it needs quite a long time to boot, otherwise very slow.
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
... also, people's perceptions of what is "normal performance" is colored by their experiences of modern multi core PCs. It used to be expected that if certain tasks were kicked off then you might as well go make a coffee, because the PC was going to be unusably laggy for the next little while.socratis wrote:most modern day OSes are going to have a hard time with 1 core only.
Which is where my advice differs somewhat. If you had a 4 core host then the advice would be to assign 2 cores to the VM. But when the host only has 2 cores then there is simply no pain-free way to run a modern guest OS. You can assign 1 core to each, understanding that both may be laggy. Or you can assign 2 cores to the VM, understanding that bogging down one now boggs down the other too.
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
I need a brand new MacMini with 3,0 (3,2) GHz 6‑Core Intel Core i5 Prozessor, 16 GB Ram, 1TB SSD - but I don't have an lotto win
Or I wait for the new MacPro and a one Million $ € win.
Or I wait for the new MacPro and a one Million $ € win.
Nice greetings
Fritz
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Coffee and a smoke... that's how I became addicted actually, I blame it all on the 8086!mpack wrote:It used to be expected that if certain tasks were kicked off then you might as well go make a coffee
Make that 32 or 64 GB of RAM, and you're going to be much happier (and poorer)...FritzS wrote:I need a brand new MacMini with 3,0 (3,2) GHz 6‑Core Intel Core i5 Prozessor, 16 GB Ram, 1TB SSD
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Strangely, Linux Mint doesn't mind, is Linux so resource-saving?mpack wrote:.....socratis wrote:most modern day OSes are going to have a hard time with 1 core only.
Which is where my advice differs somewhat. If you had a 4 core host then the advice would be to assign 2 cores to the VM. But when the host only has 2 cores then there is simply no pain-free way to run a modern guest OS. You can assign 1 core to each, understanding that both may be laggy. Or you can assign 2 cores to the VM, understanding that bogging down one now boggs down the other too.
TrueOS needs a bit more CPU line, then Windows 10.
OpenIndiana (free Solaris) needs the most.
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Fritz
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Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Well of course, if the guest OS doesn't use any CPU then the allocation doesn't matter. So it all depends on what apps you run and how the guest OS behaves in general. Some guests are very "busy", thinking that user idle time is a chance to catch up on all that disk indexing that nobody asked for. Solaris in particular has (I understand) a fancy fault tolerant filesystem which sounds like it takes a lot of checking and maintenance.FritzS wrote: Strangely, Linux Mint doesn't mind, is Linux so resource-saving?
Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Es wäre gut, wenn mal jemand das Englisch in Deutsch übersetzen würde mit Google-Translate.
Re: Prozessor - wie viele Cores darf man denn zuweisen?
Man kann generell alle Kerne der Box zuweisen, jedoch fehlen die dann den anderen Boxen und verlangsamen die anderen. Die Frage steht immer, wieviele Boxen man laufen hat. Wer wenig Ram hat, bekommt gerade mal 1-3 Boxen zum laufen, wer mehr hat schon 5-7. Ich hab 128GB Ram und kann 15 Boxen laufen lassen. Hab auch 16 Kerne. Ich gebe meist 1/4 der Kerne jeder Box. WinXP 3 , Win 7 4-6, ...