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Thread: SuSE 10.2

  1. #1
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    SuSE 10.2

    Is quite possibly the smoothest distro i have ever ran.

    If you haven't tried it, i recommend that you do.

  2. #2
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    I tried installing it last night along with Mac 10.4.8...will try to get it all installed and working this weekend.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by BrockW
    I tried installing it last night along with Mac 10.4.8...will try to get it all installed and working this weekend.
    If you need any help you are free to PM me.

  4. #4
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    SUSE is for people that like hand holding. use a real man's distro like GENTOO!

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    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    SUSE is for people that like hand holding. use a real man's distro like GENTOO!


    Another great hand holding distro is Ubuntu
    Ive tried Gentoo but found it to take far too much time.(Yeah im lazy)

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    Another great hand holding distro is Ubuntu
    Ive tried Gentoo but found it to take far too much time.(Yeah im lazy)
    LOL but that's their theme, look at their logo

    look at my Gentoo Guide, oh n/m you won't want to wait 4hours for a solid,bleeding edge,fully optimized to your CPU specs Gentoo base system,.

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    I find that most hard-core linux users tend to be very masochistic, lol. True though, if you take the time to build an optimized linux distro for your setup it will be very fast. I love linux, it's great for surfing :banana::banana::banana::banana: without worrying about viruses, lol. Really though I love how you can setup absolutely everything the way you want it. I used Mepis for a while, another nice hand-holder. I want to try Sabayon which is actually based on Gentoo. My only issue concerning Debian based distros is that I ran into problems with drivers for my aging nForce2 IGP based chipset. Nvidia no longer supports this old chipset and I did a general update and lost my video. I fixed the problem but it was annoying. I can't use alot of the bleeding edge video stuff because of package dependency issues with the older package I have to use for the older Nvidia driver. There is probably a way to do it but it's a pain. I need a new setup anyway, I'm just really poor. I'll probably buy parts for a new computer soon. I already have a Lian-Li PC7BW-Plus II sitting around.
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  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by AzraelDarkangel
    I love linux, it's great for surfing :banana::banana::banana::banana: without worrying about viruses, lol.
    LOL

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  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    LOL but that's their theme, look at their logo


    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    look at my Gentoo Guide, oh n/m you won't want to wait 4hours for a solid,bleeding edge,fully optimized to your CPU specs Gentoo base system,.
    uhm: Can you actually prove that Gentoo optimized is faster than regular Ubuntu Version for example. I higly doubt my Boinc benchmarks will be better with a Optimized Gentoo vs Ubuntu 7.04 Install. Yes i have tried Gentoo but could not find any differenze in Boinc or any other program:/

    And i removed it after having problem wit portage and programs that simply refused to compile properly...no gnutella...no Gnomebaker
    Still i was worth the try and i actually miss the Gentoo Console a little. Gentoo actually made the Console seem fun

    I prefer Ubuntu Hand Holding now, but i might return to Gentoo later
    Last edited by [XC] Teroedni; 02-28-2007 at 01:34 PM.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni




    uhm: Can you actually prove that Gentoo optimized is faster than regular Ubuntu Version for example. I higly doubt my Boinc benchmarks will be better with a Optimized Gentoo vs Ubuntu 7.04 Install. Yes i have tried Gentoo but could not find any differenze in Boinc or any other program:/

    And i removed it after having problem wit portage and programs that simply refused to compile properly...no gnutella...no Gnomebaker
    Still i was worth the try and i actually miss the Gentoo Console a little. Gentoo actually made the Console seem fun

    I prefer Ubuntu Hand Holding now, but i might return to Gentoo later
    Well it depends on how you setup your base system, your CFLAGS and if you're actually build it with NPTL support.
    BOINC definally runs faster and so will other applications. I can compile GCC-4.1.2 in only 20mins
    that's with an opteron 165 at 3Ghz.

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  11. #11
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    always have been, always will be a slackware fan
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  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by itznfb
    always have been, always will be a slackware fan
    what gcc,glibc is slackware currently supporting?

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  13. #13
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    3.4.6/2.3.6

    i still run slackware 9 though
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  14. #14
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    doubleclick
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  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    Well it depends on how you setup your base system, your CFLAGS and if you're actually build it with NPTL support.
    What is NPTL?
    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    BOINC definally runs faster and so will other applications
    Hmm i could not sense any different, but thats was the easiest kind of Gentoo install. I guess the stage 1 Install is the most optimized?


    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    . I can compile GCC-4.1.2 in only 20mins
    that's with an opteron 165 at 3Ghz.
    Hand holding Ubuntu can install/upgrade it in 5 min


    Well it could be interesting to know if Boinc was faster in optimized Gento+5.8.11 Wcg versus Ubuntu 7.04 +5.8.11 Wcg. But thats mean that someone should test it against each other. Maybe you could do some testing

    If not i may have a Sempron64@2ghz which i could first install Ubuntu 7.04 on run Wcg benchmark. Then run Optimized Gentoo on and see if i get higher benchmark. Would be interesting too see

    So the Guide you posted is the most optimized install right?
    Last edited by [XC] Teroedni; 02-28-2007 at 02:03 PM.

  16. #16
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    Likewhoa
    Another question to a expert

    Is there any differenze between 64 bit Gentoo and 32 bit?.
    I tried 64bit vs 32 bit Ubuntu, but the only differenze i could notice was that 64 bit Ubuntu eat lots more ram:/. Task did not seem to work faster.
    But thats was with precompiled Ubuntu

  17. #17
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    If you are interested in WCG then compile BOINC from source on 64bit distro yourself. Check WCG benchmark section for my results, 64bit client > 32bit client > Win However, since WCG are giving credits based on average result, your gain might not be as high as you would like to

    As for best linux or any other *nix type distro, it is really a matter of preference.
    I mainly use FC, Suse and sometimes Ubuntu.

    Those hardcore might try this one
    http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/
    Last edited by kiwi; 02-28-2007 at 02:28 PM.
    ...

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    What is NPTL?
    NPTL (Native POSIX Threads Library)

    In the GNU/Linux operating system, the Native POSIX Thread Library (NPTL) is a software feature that enables the Linux kernel to run programs written to use POSIX Threads very efficiently.

    In tests, NPTL succeeded in starting 100,000 threads on a IA-32 in two seconds. In comparison, this test under a kernel without NPTL would have taken around 15 minutes.

    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    Hmm i could not sense any different, but thats was the easiest kind of Gentoo install. I guess the stage 1 Install is the most optimized?
    Yes stage1 will get your a much more optimized and stronger toolchain based on your compiler CFLAGS/LDFLAGS, you see the stage3 install is meant to be compatible with all i686 processor architecturers this is also the case with (binary base distro) were they are pre-configure to run on a wide variety of processors i.e i686 archs. but with Gentoo stage3 you still have the freedom to optimize your CFLAGS but if you're gonna do that, you might as well do a stage1 install which will build it from the start with your optimize compiler flags.

    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    Well it could be interesting to know if Boinc was faster in optimized Gento+5.8.11 Wcg versus Ubuntu 7.04 +5.8.11 Wcg. But thats mean that someone should test it against each other. Maybe you could do some testing
    I don't see a point in proving that Gentoo vs (binary distro) i.e ubuntu,suse etc.. is faster when it's obvious that a from source distribution which compiles as you go is faster in all aspects. just remember binary distro are not compiler optimized nor cpu optimized and from source distros like Gentoo give you that control.


    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    So the Guide you posted is the most optimized install right?
    Yes, it is based on a stage1 install with NPTL enabled. The guide is setup for both 32/64bit and most CPUs.

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  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by kiwi
    If you are interested in WCG then compile BOINC from source on 64bit distro yourself. Check WCG benchmark section for my results, 64bit client > 32bit client > Win However, since WCG are giving credits based on average result, your gain might not be as high as you would like to

    As for best linux or any other *nix type distro, it is really a matter of preference.
    I mainly use FC, Suse and sometimes Ubuntu.

    Those hardcore might try this one
    http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/
    Huh?
    From my earlier run of 64 bit Ubuntu 64 bit Boinc doesnt work with Wcg. I had to use emul32 in order to run wcg on an Ubuntu 64 machine.

  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    Huh?
    From my earlier run of 64 bit Ubuntu 64 bit Boinc doesnt work with Wcg. I had to use emul32 in order to run wcg on an Ubuntu 64 machine.
    You are correct,.. BOINC 64bit sources do not work as BOINC projects look for the i686 binaries and only a 32bit BOINC client will work.
    I had to setup BOINC on my 32bit chroot setup in my 64bit environment for it to work, or else it was compiling BOINC from 32bit sources manually.

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  21. #21
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    Likewhoa
    What about gentoo and 32 vs 64 bit. Will a Stage 1 64 bit gentoo be faster than a Stage 1 32 bit gentoo or will it be the same?

    I then think on
    Compilling
    cpu usage
    startup off program
    video encoding
    etc

    What will be better with a 64 bit vs a 32 bit on a K8 processor?
    Thanks for your insight

  22. #22
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    64bit all the way, you will still be able to run your 32bit applications and experience faster responce with 64bit programs, video encoding benifits from 64bit since you're not tie down to 4GB of memory like in a 32bit environment.

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  23. #23
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    hmm so You get differences in Gentoo.
    What about compilling and the other stuff?


    When i was using Ubuntu 64 bit it was not faster than 32 bit, only difference was that the 64 bit used more memory

  24. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teroedni
    hmm so You get differences in Gentoo.
    What about compilling and the other stuff?


    When i was using Ubuntu 64 bit it was not faster than 32 bit, only difference was that the 64 bit used more memory
    You won't notice an overall difference in speed, but in multi-threaded applications, raw data access, encryption and video encoding you will. plus 64bit has mature now and it's not like it use to be were alot didn't work. so it doesn't hurt nor is a risk using it, you only can look forward to a gain in performance and 64bit computing that's not to say 64bit is faster at everything because that's not true yea..

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  25. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by likewhoa
    SUSE is for people that like hand holding. use a real man's distro like GENTOO!
    No, not really, compiling crap from scratch means absolutely nothing besides wasting time, it's not faster either, in test after test after test it has been shown to be as fast or as slow as packages compiled for any other distro.

    IOW, gentoo is a waste of time, you don't learn much either since you pretty mush have to follow the handbook to be able to compile the system, it does not adhere to any Linus standards either, only to it's own.

    If you want to learn Gentoo, install Gentoo, if you want to learn Linux, install Slackware.

    SuSE is a nice distro that allows you to do your things manually while keeping track of the system when you need to uupgrade, and yeah, you need to do that quite often.

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