Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 25 Oct 1996 20:52:38 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Mark Mayo <mark@quickweb.com>
To:        Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com, ejs@bfd.com, michaelv@MindBender.serv.net, scrappy@ki.net, current@FreeBSD.org, smp@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Recommendations...
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.94.961025204740.16038B-100000@vinyl.quickweb.com>
In-Reply-To: <199610252255.PAA29409@sunrise.cs.berkeley.edu>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Fri, 25 Oct 1996, Satoshi Asami wrote:

>  * What low memory bandwidth on the Natoma???  That thing smokes when comparied
>  * to a 430HX chipset.
> 
> That contradicts our findings.  A P5-133 with Triton or Triton II can
> move 70-80MB/s (depending on EDO or non-EDO), but I can't get more
> than 45MB/s out of a P6-200 with Natoma/server (at least that's what
> Intel told us).

That's odd, here are my speeds on a P6-200 with Natoma (440fx)/server
board straight from intel:

Function      Rate (MB/s)   RMS time     Min time     Max time
Copy:          76.1639       0.0633       0.0630       0.0648
Scale:         75.5894       0.0636       0.0635       0.0638
Add:           81.3670       0.0886       0.0885       0.0887
Triad:         80.6036       0.0894       0.0893       0.0896

And that was with 12 users logged in and the load at .23. I'd imagine it
would be a little faster (~85 MB/s perhaps) in single user mode. It's
using 60ns parity RAM.

Even my workstation I'm sitting on (a first generation Pro 150 from
Digital, 450GX server chipset - funky!!) gets about 65 MB/s average on the
STREAM tests. If you're PPro is only doing 45 MB/s, it's time to bring it
back and get a new one!!

-mark

-------------------------------------------
| Mark Mayo		mark@quickweb.com |
| C-Soft  	        www.quickweb.com  |
-------------------------------------------
"To iterate is human, to recurse divine."
		- L. Peter Deutsch


> 
> Satoshi
> 
> P.S. Details on "http://now.cs.berkeley.edu/Td/bcopy.html".
> 




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?Pine.BSF.3.94.961025204740.16038B-100000>