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#11
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Wayne Youngman wrote:
"Ziferten" wrote What is the maximum that the Athlon XP 2800+ supports? I use a Gigabyte GA-7N400 Pro2 by the way Hi, the standard *system bus* for the XP2800+ is 333MHz, but you should be able to run it on the 400MHz *system-bus*. This would depend on whether or not your CPU was locked. I'm not familiar with your mobo. Wayne, if you removed all instances of "Mhz" from that statement it would be correct. Mhz is a unit of measurement, being used incorrectly by you. (And Intel and AMD in their blurb BTW) C'mon guys, this is a fairly tech-savvy group, we should be able to get it right and reduce the FUD that newbies are exposed to. -- ~misfit~ |
#12
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~misfit~ wrote:
David Maynard wrote: BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. Yes, but David my friend, you said "333MHz FSB". That is plainly incorrect, the "MHz" part of it. Feel free to explain 333 'what' it is |
#13
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David Maynard wrote:
~misfit~ wrote: David Maynard wrote: BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. Yes, but David my friend, you said "333MHz FSB". That is plainly incorrect, the "MHz" part of it. Feel free to explain 333 'what' it is MegaSignals/second (MS/s). g Two signals per hertz. -- ~misfit~ |
#14
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A bus must follow the same speed limits as private automobiles; measured in
KPh or MPh (Kilo packets pre hour or Mega Packets per hour. So these processor Front Side Buses are vastly exceeding legal limits, and should be reined in. Likely pumping the accelerator too often is the cause. -- Phil Weldon, pweldonatmindjumpdotcom For communication, replace "at" with the 'at sign' replace "mindjump" with "mindspring." replace "dot" with "." |
#15
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~misfit~ wrote:
David Maynard wrote: ~misfit~ wrote: David Maynard wrote: BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. Yes, but David my friend, you said "333MHz FSB". That is plainly incorrect, the "MHz" part of it. Feel free to explain 333 'what' it is MegaSignals/second (MS/s). g Two signals per hertz. Hehe. Sure. That'll clear it up. I can just hear it now: people complaining it's (really) 'MicroSofts'/s Btw, Hertz is defined as "hertz (Hz): 1. The SI unit of frequency, equal to one cycle per second. Note: A periodic phenomenon that has a period of one second has a frequency of one hertz. (188) 2. A unit of frequency which is equivalent to one cycle per second." http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/fs-1037/dir-018/_2563.htm And the data transfer rate qualifies as "a periodic phenomenon." "Frequency" is not just an electrical term and is not restricted to electronic waveforms. You have to be careful about sloppy definitions. For example, look at this one: http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/H/Hz.html "Short for Hertz, a unit of frequency of electrical vibrations equal to one cycle per second. The Hertz is named after Heinrich Hertz, who first detected electromagnetic waves." Oh really? Only "electrical vibrations?" So Hertz doesn't apply to sound waves? The range of human hearing isn't 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz? Then we're going to have to send all our astrophysicists back to school too because they think frequency applies to orbits. http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0110209 "We compute the maximum orbital frequency of stable circular motion around uniformly rotating strange stars described by the MIT bag model. The calculations are performed for both normal and supramassive constant baryon mass sequences of strange stars rotating at all possible rates. We find the lower limits on the maximum orbital frequency and discuss them for a range of masses and for all rotational frequencies allowed in the model considered. We show that for slowly and moderately rotating strange stars the maximum value of orbital frequency can be a good indicator of the mass of the compact object. However, for rapidly rotating strange stars the same value of orbital frequency in the innermost stable circular orbit is obtained for stars with masses ranging from that of a planetoid to about three solar masses. At sufficiently high rotation rates of the strange star, the rotational period alone constrains the stellar mass to a surprisingly narrow range." That second definition falls into the trap I allude to with my lament of the change from Cycles/s to Hertz: that using the name "Hertz" suddenly limits the scope. |
#16
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David Maynard wrote:
Michael Brown wrote: David Maynard wrote: BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. Oh dear, oh dear, here we go again ... It depends on whether you measure the control lines or the data lines for quoting the "bus speed" number. No it doesn't. It has to do with how many data transfer cycles there are. This is exactly what I mean There are some lines on the bus that "operate" at x MHz, and some that "operate" at 4*x MHz. What, then, is the bus speed? There are valid arguments for both directions. From a performance standpoint, I personally think the x MHz number is better (and expand the "bus width" accordingly); you obviously think the MHz should be scaled. I actually think a more accurate way of representing it (performance-wise) is a 128-bit bus (DDR) or 256-bit bus (QDR), both running at 166MHz. Except it isn't '128 bits' or '256 bits' wide. It does, however, transfer data at either 2, for dual pumped, or 4 times, for quad pumped, the system clock rate. Hence why I explicitly said "performance-wise". The question I was answering was: Which closer represents the performance of a 64 bit x MHz QDR bus? (a) A 64-bit 4*x MHz SDR bus (b) A 256-bit x MHz SDR bus The correct answer is (b). Of course, at the low level, it's still a 64-bit bus, except one part is operating at x MHz and another part at 4*x MHz. [...] Say you have a 166MHz DDR system (aka DDR333), and a 100MHz QDR system (aka QDR400), and the CPU runs at 1GHz (6.0x for DDR, 10.0x for QDR). Excluding memory latencies, to fill a randomly-accessed 64-byte cache line would take: Waiting for bus strobe: 3.0 cycles (DDR system), 5.0 cycles (QDR system) Transferring data: 24 cycles (DDR), 20 cycles (QDR) Total: 27 cycles (DDR), 25 cycles (QDR) So DDR333 is, under random access conditions, only marginally slower than QDR400. The actual break-even point is 180MHz (actually slightly above due to memory latencies), but hopefully you get the idea. Of course, the QDR system will perform better under "streaming" type conditions, where the higher latency won't matter so much. No, you're analyzing the memory, not the processor bus. Errm, not at all. I specifically EXCLUDE any memory performance considerations from the analysis: see the third line of your quoted section. I'm solely analysing how long it would take to fill (or write out) a processor cache line over a DDR/QDR bus, which is pretty much all the processor bus is used for. The exact same argument applies to the point-to-point DDR busses in a K7 SMP system, if having memory in the picture makes things confusing for you. [...] Incidentally, this issue is exasparated by the P4's 128-byte cache line, as opposed to the 64-byte cache line of the K7. Processor (L2) cache has nothing to do with bus speed. Hence my "incidentally" (spot the recurring theme he I don't usually put in words for no reason). The processor cache line size (note: cache LINE size, not cache size or anything else) and bus performance characteristics are quite interlinked for the performance of a processor. The larger cache line size improves streaming performance and decreases random-access performance, which is exactly the same characteristics as a QDR bus. My point was that the P4 has been heavily tweaked towards streaming computations, as opposed to having fast random-access times. [...] Btw, what don't you call a 3.4 Gig P4 a 200Mhz P4 because the 'real clock' (sic) is 200 Mhz. That 3.4 Gig number is just 'hype'. Why don't you call it a 6.8GHz P4? :P I call it a 3.4GHz CPU because it operates on a 3.4GHz clock rate. The external signalling is at 200MHz or 800MHz, but this has not the operating frequency of the CPU itself. DDR/QDR is a much trickier problem, as part of it is operating at 200MHz, and another part at 800MHz. Sort of as if the ALUs all operated at 6.8GHz and the floating point units all operated at 3.4GHz. Oh, dearie me ... [...] -- Michael Brown www.emboss.co.nz : OOS/RSI software and more Add michael@ to emboss.co.nz - My inbox is always open |
#17
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Alright, so I didn't get an answer, but I learned way more about Hertz!
"Ziferten" wrote in message ... What is the maximum that the Athlon XP 2800+ supports? I use a Gigabyte GA-7N400 Pro2 by the way |
#18
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You said 333MHz...a MHz is a measure of frequency. The frequency in MHz of a
XP2800+ FSB is 166...end of story. -- *****Replace 'NOSPAM' with 'btinternet' in the reply address***** "David Maynard" wrote in message ... BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. The maximum that the processor will run at depends on many things. If it's un-locked you would be able to lower the multiplier and run it on a 200MHz FSB, however if its one of the more recent locked models the maximum FSB would be in the region of 175-190MHz, depending on how overclockable the cpu is, how good your cooling is etc. He didn't ask what speed he might be able to push it to. He asked "What is the maximum that the Athlon XP 2800+ supports?" and the "Maximum System Bus Speed" that the processor "supports" is the bus speed it's rated for. |
#19
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Yes. In previous discussions I've also pointed out that same argument as the perspective of the 'purist'. It does, however, beg the question about the data rate of a 166.6Mhz clocked double data rate bus being 333 'what'? To which I mused perhaps we should regret having changed from the original designation of "Cycles/Second" to "Hertz." (It's interesting to note that few would find such a problem with a bus rate designation of 333 'Mega-Cycles/Second' but do when the synonym "Hertz" is substituted) Hertz is a measure of Mega Cycles per second...we both agree on that. The dictionary 'physics' definition of a cycle is: one complete oscillation: one complete continuous change in the magnitude of an oscillating quantity or system that brings the system back to its original energy state. Therefore it does not matter how many data points is carried on the wave, the frequency is the number of cycles (or oscillations) per second and for an XP2800+ this is 166,600,000....or 166MHz |
#20
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Michael Brown wrote:
David Maynard wrote: Michael Brown wrote: David Maynard wrote: BigBadger wrote: No it's not 333MHz, it's actually a 166 'MHz' FSB processor....333 is just AMD hype to sell the virtues of the DDR bus. Intel do the same trick but they multiply the real bus speed by 4x. Double and quad pumping the bus is not "hype." It's an engineering technique for transferring data twice, or 4 times for quad, per clock cycle. 333 is the bus cycle rate, e.g. "Bus Speed," and is the relevant number from a performance standpoint. Oh dear, oh dear, here we go again ... It depends on whether you measure the control lines or the data lines for quoting the "bus speed" number. No it doesn't. It has to do with how many data transfer cycles there are. This is exactly what I mean There are some lines on the bus that "operate" at x MHz, and some that "operate" at 4*x MHz. It is irrelevant what "some lines" do. What's relevant is the data rate. What, then, is the bus speed? The bus 'speed' is the data rate. There are valid arguments for both directions. From a performance standpoint, I personally think the x MHz number is better (and expand the "bus width" accordingly); you obviously think the MHz should be scaled. It isn't a matter of 'scaling' anything. The data rate is the data rate. I actually think a more accurate way of representing it (performance-wise) is a 128-bit bus (DDR) or 256-bit bus (QDR), both running at 166MHz. Except it isn't '128 bits' or '256 bits' wide. It does, however, transfer data at either 2, for dual pumped, or 4 times, for quad pumped, the system clock rate. Hence why I explicitly said "performance-wise". The question I was answering was: Which closer represents the performance of a 64 bit x MHz QDR bus? (a) A 64-bit 4*x MHz SDR bus (b) A 256-bit x MHz SDR bus The correct answer is (b). The correct answer is (a) because that is REALITY. (b) is a figment of your imagination. Of course, at the low level, it's still a 64-bit bus, except one part is operating at x MHz and another part at 4*x MHz. Nope. All the bits of the data arrive at precisely the same rate. [...] Say you have a 166MHz DDR system (aka DDR333), and a 100MHz QDR system (aka QDR400), and the CPU runs at 1GHz (6.0x for DDR, 10.0x for QDR). Excluding memory latencies, to fill a randomly-accessed 64-byte cache line would take: Waiting for bus strobe: 3.0 cycles (DDR system), 5.0 cycles (QDR system) Transferring data: 24 cycles (DDR), 20 cycles (QDR) Total: 27 cycles (DDR), 25 cycles (QDR) So DDR333 is, under random access conditions, only marginally slower than QDR400. The actual break-even point is 180MHz (actually slightly above due to memory latencies), but hopefully you get the idea. Of course, the QDR system will perform better under "streaming" type conditions, where the higher latency won't matter so much. No, you're analyzing the memory, not the processor bus. Errm, not at all. I specifically EXCLUDE any memory performance considerations from the analysis: see the third line of your quoted section. You claim to be excluding it but you embed it in your analysis nonetheless. You also create artificial conditions in direct contrast to reality by, for example, trying to limit the analysis to 'random access' on a bus that is specifically designed for, optimized for, and RATED AT it's synchronous stream transfer rate whether it be SDR, DDR, or QDR. Heck, the names you (properly) use explain it even as you're denying it: SRD - Single DATA RATE, DDR - Double DATA RATE, QDR - Quad DATA RATE. I'm solely analysing how long it would take to fill (or write out) a processor cache line over a DDR/QDR bus, which is pretty much all the processor bus is used for. The exact same argument applies to the point-to-point DDR busses in a K7 SMP system, if having memory in the picture makes things confusing for you. You can wag imaginative theories and pick artificial 'conditions' all you want. I'm telling you how it works. [...] Incidentally, this issue is exasparated by the P4's 128-byte cache line, as opposed to the 64-byte cache line of the K7. Processor (L2) cache has nothing to do with bus speed. Hence my "incidentally" (spot the recurring theme he I don't usually put in words for no reason). The processor cache line size (note: cache LINE size, not cache size or anything else) and bus performance characteristics are quite interlinked for the performance of a processor. The larger cache line size improves streaming performance and decreases random-access performance, which is exactly the same characteristics as a QDR bus. My point was that the P4 has been heavily tweaked towards streaming computations, as opposed to having fast random-access times. We aren't talking about the "performance of a processor." We're talking about the bus data rate. [...] Btw, what don't you call a 3.4 Gig P4 a 200Mhz P4 because the 'real clock' (sic) is 200 Mhz. That 3.4 Gig number is just 'hype'. Why don't you call it a 6.8GHz P4? :P Because the reality of it is that it's operating at 3.4 GHz. I call it a 3.4GHz CPU because it operates on a 3.4GHz clock rate. The external signalling is at 200MHz or 800MHz, but this has not the operating frequency of the CPU itself. Well, close. Yes, it operates at 3.4 Ghz but the "external signaling" is an irrelevant comment. A 3.4 Gig processor is a 3.4 Gig processor regardless of the bus speed or even what external clock it derives it's internal clock from; as long as the internal clock ends up at 3.4 Ghz. And it doesn't matter if it comes from single pumping, dual pumping, quad pumping, hex pumping, or any other multiplier of the external clock. DDR/QDR is a much trickier problem, as part of it is operating at 200MHz, and another part at 800MHz. Nope, and it's not tricky at all. A 166.6 MHz clocked DDR bus has a stream rate of 333 million data cycles per second and a 200 MHz clocked Quad pumped bus has a stream rate of 800 million data cycles per second. Which, btw, is independednt of the bus width. Hertz is the synonym of "cycles per second." I.E. In the above examples, the DDR bus has a 333 MHz data rate and the QDR bus has an 800MHz data rate; which happens to be the way they are typically rated. Sort of as if the ALUs all operated at 6.8GHz and the floating point units all operated at 3.4GHz. Oh, dearie me ... The problem is you want everything to be a 'waveform' and that just isn't the case. And, btw, not every signal in a 3.4 GHz processor is jumping around at 3.4Ghz either: that's just the clock rate. [...] -- Michael Brown www.emboss.co.nz : OOS/RSI software and more Add michael@ to emboss.co.nz - My inbox is always open |
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