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Date:      Mon, 5 Mar 2001 12:27:20 -0800 (PST)
From:      Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com>
To:        Chris Dillon <cdillon@wolves.k12.mo.us>
Cc:        "E.B. Dreger" <eddy+public+spam@noc.everquick.net>, <freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: Machines are getting too damn fast
Message-ID:  <200103052027.f25KRK442804@earth.backplane.com>
References:   <Pine.BSF.4.32.0103050855460.72733-100000@mail.wolves.k12.mo.us>

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:On Mon, 5 Mar 2001, E.B. Dreger wrote:
:
:I've got a ServerWorks III HE-SL system with 512MB of two-way
:interleaved PC133 SDRAM and dual PIII-800's.  Is that close enough?
::-)
:
:Here is my "memory bandwidth test", much much simpler and less
:scientific than Matt's:
:
:dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null bs=10m count=1000
:1000+0 records in
:1000+0 records out
:10485760000 bytes transferred in 23.716504 secs (442129245 bytes/sec)
:
:I just did a recent 4.2-STABLE 'make -j 4 buildworld' on that system
:in just over 34 minutes.  Here's the time output:
:1980.707u 768.223s 34:20.89 133.3%      1297+1456k 39517+6202io 1661pf+0w

    That is quite impressive for SDRAM, though I'm not exactly sure what's
    being measured due to the way /dev/zero and /dev/null operate.  On
    my system the above dd test returns around 883MB/sec so I would guess
    that it is only doing a read-swipe on the memory.

(sony 1.3G / RIMM)
apollo:/home/dillon> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null bs=10m count=1000
1000+0 records in
1000+0 records out
10485760000 bytes transferred in 11.867550 secs (883565697 bytes/sec)

    On the DELL 2400 I get:

1048576000 bytes transferred in 2.737955 secs (382977810 bytes/sec)

    The only thing I don't like about this baby is the IBM IDE hard drive's
    write performance.  I only get 10-12 MBytes/sec.  Read performance is
    incredible, though... I get 37MB/sec dd'ing from /dev/ad0s1a to
    /dev/null.

    ad0: 58644MB <IBM-DTLA-307060> [119150/16/63] at ata0-master UDMA100

					-Matt

:> If one _truly_ needs the bandwidth of Rambus (which, IIRC, is
:> higher real-world latency than SDRAM), then how about having the
:> bus bandwidth to back it up?
:
:The higher real-world latency of RDRAM over SDRAM is what makes the
:benefits of its higher bandwidth so questionable.  PC2100 DDR-SDRAM --
:which has higher latencies than regular SDRAM but still lower than
:RDRAM -- should have it beat soundly, though we'll have to wait for
:some systems that are actually designed to take advantage of it to say
:for sure.  :-)
:
:
:-- Chris Dillon - cdillon@wolves.k12.mo.us - cdillon@inter-linc.net


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