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Date:      Wed, 24 Jan 2018 13:21:39 +0000
From:      Nimrod Levy <nimrodl@gmail.com>
To:        Mike Pumford <michaelp@bsquare.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Ryzen issues on FreeBSD ?
Message-ID:  <CAMgUhprwX5hQkNcyA4C%2BeU%2B_pQVfH-6VbH%2BsWmLc7U3B1WhQkg@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <bb9d9da0-e1c1-155d-5c80-db0f7f4a1388@bsquare.com>
References:  <8e842dec-ade7-37d1-6bd8-856ea1a827ca@sentex.net> <3b625072-dfb3-6b4f-494d-7fe1b2fa554c@ingresso.co.uk> <2c6ce4dd-f43c-7c40-abc2-732d6f8996ec@sentex.net> <tkrat.6d8f44d87e74fa14@FreeBSD.org> <795dbb79-3c18-d967-98b9-5d09a740dbfe@sentex.net> <CAMgUhpr%2B5HeBi1MRegs=XoKpdHW8-i%2Bec0k-DNaL_pcN6PCPKw@mail.gmail.com> <tkrat.5ec856810e0c7ced@FreeBSD.org> <CAMgUhpqZyCOjqVhMCAi-b_JaKYtyfqDf0pOcX0LwV2dcTuusyg@mail.gmail.com> <CAMgUhpqpYpoi1bD9h_SYvh83g_Csky%2BqMkTsOYZ1zcHYxtMeHg@mail.gmail.com> <dd29d77a-deb9-423e-f9b8-cb07387bbfd5@sentex.net> <9b769e4e-b098-b294-0bce-8bb1c42e8a59@rootautomation.com> <a601973f-9205-8dd9-7f78-a7f03985ab4a@sentex.net> <CAMgUhpop3=J7TQimK2iHdGTc=hnTgCEZDqibDSRCyTPMWX5wJQ@mail.gmail.com> <CAMgUhprfSFv1268-MtQoMn%2BgD-DtOhR2-rnFsMHTgJrK0dop6Q@mail.gmail.com> <508a8c83-a449-3c5d-c3bf-b308d91c80c0@bsquare.com> <CAMgUhprXtknTNxW63e5hVFPZP3ad6GbjLCwqe5N9hGbvxWm_tw@mail.gmail.com> <bb9d9da0-e1c1-155d-5c80-db0f7f4a1388@bsquare.com>

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If my google-fu is any good today, DDR3 maxes out at 2133.  DDR4 seems to
go up to 3200[1]. The motherboard claims to support all speeds.

This RAM is supposed to be DDR4-2400, but if it keeps things happy, I'll
run it at 2133.

[1] https://www.kingston.com/us/memory/ddr4

On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 7:28 AM Mike Pumford <michaelp@bsquare.com> wrote:

> On 24/01/2018 12:11, Nimrod Levy wrote:
> > The RAM was detected by the MB as 2400.  I didn't change it until I set
> > it to the slower speed.
> >
> I guess the Intel motherboards I have are more conservative then. They
> default to the standard RAM profile (slower than what it is sold as) and
> you have to explicitly enable the faster profiles (which do also come
> from data  read from RAM). So it seems like your BIOS vendor is picking
> the faster profile as a default.
>
> I've got a couple of intel systems like this (one windows and one BSD)
> and neither ran stable with the faster RAM profiles.
>
>  From what I read at the time 2133 is the official upper limit of the
> DDR4 standard. Any speed faster than that is an overclock profile.
>
> Mike
>
> --
> Mike Pumford | Senior Software Engineer
>
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-- 

--
Nimrod



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