Michel Py wrote: Terminators are a thing of the past; as a matter of fact, in California and especially in Sacramento they're called governators now.
Erik Bais wrote: You mean, they'll be back?
:-D Only once, and this model is obsolete and can't be upgraded to presidentor.
Paul Jakma wrote: Intel dont do fault-tolerant SMP. Running SMP will lower your MTBF just by fact that you now have 2 CPUs.
True; this would be like raid-0 arrays, the more disks the greater the chance of failure. However, MTBF is not the name of the game here, availability ratio is. Which is tied to failure rate. In other words, I don't really care if the second processor reduces the MTBF from 200k hours to 60k hours, but I do care if the second processor reduces the time to restore service from 24 hours to 20 minutes (7.5 minutes for SNMP to fail the query twice, 1.5 minute for the tech to find out that either it's frozen or there's a BSOD, 6 minutes to have someone go there and reset, 5 minutes to reboot). The dead processor still has to be replaced, but this is scheduled maintenance, not outage. A little extra ammo when you have to hunt five or six nines.
Then there's fact that you're far more likely to hit bugs in OS with SMP than uniproc.
Unsignificant in my experience, and does not balance what Alexei mentioned yesterday: a duallie will keep the system up when a faulty process hogs 100% CPU, because the second one is still available. That also increases availability ratio. Michel.