Package: linux-image-2.6 Severity: wishlist The differences between desktop and server requirements are great. The kernel Hz is an excellent example of this - servers seem to require as few as possible while desktops need as many as they can get their hands on. The compromise in the Debian kernel is 250, which leans heavily towards the server side. Another example is kernel preemption - this seems to be a bad thing for servers while more is better for desktops. Again, the Debian kernel defers to the server(the kernel is completely unpreemptable). By using separate kernels, the server flavor can be completely optimized(instead of mostly optimized) while desktop users will get a kernel designed with them in mind(say, 1000Hz and totally preemptable, including the RCUs once that feature matures a bit; maybe use the ondemand governor by default) without needing a recompile (Debian != Gentoo).
-- System Information: Debian Release: lenny/sid APT prefers testing APT policy: (990, 'testing'), (500, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental') Architecture: i386 (i686) Kernel: Linux 2.6.26 (SMP w/1 CPU core; PREEMPT) Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash