On 12/11/06, Matthew Saltzman <mjs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, 11 Dec 2006, James Wilkinson wrote: > Les wrote: >> I don't know what you are working on Mike, but if it helps, I installed >> to a 433Mhz celeron with the i386 package and when I ran that command I >> got: >> kernel-2.6.18-1.2798.fc6.i586 >> kernel-2.6.18-1.2849.fc6.i586 >> kernel-devel-2.6.18-1.2798.fc6.i586 >> kernel-devel-2.6.18-1.2849.fc6.i586 >> kernel-headers-2.6.18-1.2849.fc6.i386 >> >> I was sort of expecting them all to say i386??? Maybe someone can help >> us understand what's happening. > > i586 will work, but an i686 kernel will work slightly better on a > Celeron. > > The basic 32 bit set of instructions that x86 Linux uses were introduced > with the Intel i386 back in 1986. Later Intel processors added extra > instructions to help in specific cases. (Later on, various "multimedia" > instructions were also added, but that's a separate discussion.) > > Most user-space programs don't actually need or gain from those extra > instructions. So Fedora compiles most programs using only i386 > instructions -- hence the "i386" in most package names. > > Some packages (the kernel and glibc, for example) *can* make use of the > extra instructions. So Fedora provides an i686 version of those > packages, which do use the extra instructions. Unfortunately, there are > still some processors which don't support the i686 level of instructions > (Via only recently started supporting them, and AMD K6s are still used). > For these processors, Fedora provides an i586 version. (i586 > instructions are still better than just the i386 instruction set in > these cases). > > i586 programs will work on later processors, but i586 processors don't > know how to handle i686 instructions. (If they did, they'd be i686 > processors). > > I'm not sure whether the kernel headers actually contain *any* > instructions -- if they do, they'd be tiny portions of assembler. They > don't use processor-specific instructions, so count as i386. > > Hope this helps, IIRC, the i586 was peculiar to original Pentium and Pentium MMS. I recall some discussion that optimal instruction ordering was different enough on i586 and i686 that running i586 kernels on i686 chips would result in more or less significant performance issues. > > James. > > -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
Is everything right with my system now that it says i686 instead of i586? Kind Regards, Mike