[Freeswitch-users] freeswitch CPU usage

Jean-Yves F. Barbier 12ukwn at gmail.com
Sat Aug 21 08:41:56 PDT 2010


Le Sat, 21 Aug 2010 17:58:27 +0300,
"Vlasis Hatzistavrou (KTI)" <vhatz at kinetix.gr> a écrit :

> Hello Jean-Yves,
> 
> Thanks for the effort to calm me down, but I am calm and fine. :)

That I understand, Vlasis; just a matter of speaking ;)
 
> Just for the record I wasn't the one doing the tests, I was just 
> defending the guy who asked the original question because I've been in 
> his place and felt for him.

My purpose was just to extinguish this sterile discussion.

Each part have real good arguments to counter the other part, but as
nobody wants to leave its part of the cake I'm trying to guess a
solution that would be the best for everybody tout le monde.

This is why I think even a "bad" test could be good BUT ONLY if test
conditions are even every time it is performed.

The *real* question behind all of this is: why always test and compare?
Wouldn't it be because large and greedy companies (also ear governments,
especially corrupted ones by these same large companies) put that in our
mind to sell every day more (and "better") to people that don't need it...
Think about that.

When I'm working for other I try to make it for the best and do it like
if it was for myself - so I don't ask less from open-source devs that
make tremendous programs, which if fortunately (almost) the case.

So I can make a proposition to the dev team to _*definitely*_ fire down this
kinda non-discussion:
* Make a realistic serie of recursive test (who's more skilled than
  you to build that?:),
* Always use the same machine with the same environment (possibly a "weak"
  one, such as a simple P4 2.0GHz w/ 2GB RAM: think about third world
  countries for which this kind of project is very important),
* Publish the test serie results each time it is needed.

(nooo, not the head AND the kidneys!!!)

JY

PS: I didn't choosed the fortune signature, it is a cron:)
-- 
There appears to be irrefutable evidence that the mere fact of overcrowding
induces violence.
		-- Harvey Wheeler



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