> Hi Misc,
>
> Even though this article:
http://bulk.fefe.de/scalability was many years
> ago and performance in OpenBSD had improved greatly since that time, I
> still hear people (mostly younger people) complain about OpenBSD
> performance. They cite poor threading, unused cores, no bigmem support,
> etc. Yet, when asked outright to demonstrate their issue, no one can show
> numbers or reproduce a performance issue. How do others defend OpenBSD in
> these conversations? I normally cite the things I admire most about
> OpenBSD:
>
> 1. Simplicty - (IMO, this is by far its greatest attribute... simple is
> secure)
> 2. OpenSSH
> 3. pf, carp, OpenBGPD
> 4. built-in security
> 5. ports collection
>
> But, I'd like to have hard technicaly data to demonstrate that while Linux
> and FreeBSD may scale to a gazillion CPUs and PetaBytes of Memory that
> OpenBSD makes a fine firewall or desktop or mail server, etc and point out
> that the old article so many people cite is indeed *old*.
>
> Thanks for any suggestions. I hate seeing such a fine OS so easily
> dismissed by folks (many of whom) have never even tried it!