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Date:      Mon, 26 Aug 1996 08:32:59 -0700
From:      Darryl Okahata <darrylo@hpnmhjw.sr.hp.com>
To:        current@freefall.freebsd.org
Cc:        "Rodney W. Grimes" <rgrimes@GndRsh.aac.dev.com>
Subject:   Re: Speedingup the "worldstone" 
Message-ID:  <199608261532.AA141643579@hpnmhjw.sr.hp.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Sun, 25 Aug 1996 23:08:11 PDT."

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Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@GndRsh.aac.dev.com> wrote:

> More correctly you won't get more than 6 to 8MB/s on ISA based 486
> systems,

     On an ISA-based system, it's a lot closer to 2MB/s (sustained, not
burst).  (Or, are you talking about RAID/striping?)

     Here are some bonnie numbers for a Quantum Fireball 1280S.  Note
the huge improvement going from ISA to PCI.  The first is for an
ISA-based 1542CF controller, and the second is for an NCR815/PCI-based
controller:

              -------Sequential Output-------- ---Sequential Input-- --Random--
              -Per Char- --Block--- -Rewrite-- -Per Char- --Block--- --Seeks---
Machine    MB K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU  /sec %CPU
ISA/1280   60  1349 95.2  2237 63.9   804 35.7  1361 92.2  1943 22.0  42.6  5.7
PCI/1280  256  4267 86.3  4393 19.2  1207  8.3  4118 77.9  4620 17.8  56.8  2.5

The exact same drive mechanism was used on two systems:

      * 486DX4/100 w/256K cache, 24MB RAM, & an ISA-based Adaptec
        1542CF.  FreeBSD 2.1R, untuned kernel, untuned 1542 (DMA setting
        of 5MB/sec).

      * P133 w/512K cache, 64MB RAM, & an NCR815-based PCI SCSI
        controller.  FreeBSD 2.1R, untuned kernel

The block numbers above should be CPU-independent, although I'm not sure
about the "per-char" ones; these might be impacted by CPU performance.

     -- Darryl Okahata
	Internet: darrylo@sr.hp.com

DISCLAIMER: this message is the author's personal opinion and does not
constitute the support, opinion, or policy of Hewlett-Packard, or of the
little green men that have been following him all day.



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