Ok, lots of questions. I will try to answer them all.crodgers wrote:I have not used VMware yet, but I understand the concept - virtual machine = software running an environment that you load another OS into and use just like another PC - all running within your existing PC. Do you have links to some instructions that show how to set it up on an intel quad core running Vista - from scratch? What linux are you running in VM? Umbuntu? RH? SLES? Did you use a pre-configured VM package with VM player? Or build it yourself? If I can get more throughput from my existing box (without burning up the house), I would be game.
You mentioned that the SMP under Vista does not get nearly the amount of ppd as 2 X VM linux. If I switch to the 2 X VM linux setup,
* will the machine run hotter than SMP Vista?
* can I still try to run a GPU client - or will that just take away from the VM clients?
* if I want to try a GPU client, could it run in the VM as well?
* can I still run windows tasks periodically (rip a CD, check out forums like this, etc)?
* is it difficult to shut off the VM clients when the PC needs to be rebooted (Vista updates, hurricane, etc)?
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Your machine will run hotter as the CPU will now be running much closer to 100%.
Yes, you can run the GPU client - in fact you need to run it at just a little higher priority so that it gets the CPU it needs. I usually lower the priority on the vmware engines so they run at the lowest priority.
Yes, you can still use your machine and it doesn't appear to impact much - of course I do this on a dedicated machine, so I don't use the machine for much other than folding.
I installed the linux smp clients using 'finstall' (check the 3rd party tools). It sets up the client to start on boot and shutdown when you turn off the machine. If I need to reboot vista, I just login to linux and shutdown each VM (which nicely shuts the client down). Once Vista is up and talking, I restart vmware and it starts crunching again.
I currently start vmware by hand after a reboot, but once I finish playing with it, I will try to make it even more autonomous.
Another cool feature is I use VNC to remotely monitor the machine (there is no monitor on it). VMware also supports using VNC to connect to the virtual machines. This means I can connect to the main vista machine, or any of the virtual machines with VNC if I want to check on anything.
So far it is averaging something over 10k ppd.
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Rick..