Am Donnerstag, 20. März 2008 19:10:55 schrieb Atte André Jensen:
Hi
I've been running debian for years, and was very pleased with it's
performance. However, for other reasons (mainly 6 months release cycle),
I recently switched to ubuntu. Although I think I have everything setup
the same (realtime kernel, /etc/security/limits.conf and chrt of irqs),
I can't get the same performance as with debian.
Before we start pulling my system apart and I post half the content of
/etc/, can anyone think of what might be different enough to cause
realtime problems? Anyone else having the same feeling about debian vs
ubuntu?
I realize that gnome vs openbox and the usability-enhancing-daemons in
ubuntu (network manager, power manager, plugin-detection-of-usb, stuff
like that) might be making a difference, but my realtime setup under
debian was rock steady, 0 xruns while compiling kernels, checking email,
whatever. Under ubuntu it's generally good, but every few minutes
something creates dropouts, or chopping up of the audio stream.
Hi
I am a debian user to. So I cant say what's the difference between. But it let
me think on my new harddrive that I switch on last day's. First it drives me
creasy. I get xrun's all few minutes. I realease that I am forget to turn on
dma for the harddrive.
http://linux.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/linux/2000/06/29/hdparm.html
Now my system is stable like it was befor.
I dont know anything about ubuntu, I am a debian/sid user.
regards hermann