Hi all,
Anybody knows why the IO bandwidth on a NT Intel box is that much
limited? Why it is that hard to get even close to 100 Mbyte/sec, if the
theoretical bandwidth of PCI can be much higher? like: 66Mhz x 32bit bus
= 66Mhz x4 byte = 266 Mbyte/sec?
What cause this difference between theoretical and practical
bandwidth? is it CPU, chipset, or cache coherence mechanism?
Is it just the ugly Operating System? Is possible to get more on a Linux
on Intel machine? On an Sgi/Irix, with THE SAME PCI bus you can easily
get over 200 Mbyte/sec...
What is the best disk read bandwidth on a Linux you have ever seen?
on which hardware?
Maybe the new Linux SGI file system (efs = xfs) is going to improve
this, or is it a hardware limitation of Intel boxes?.....
Lot of questions here.... put in your two cents of worth, please ;)
Best regards,
David, Roman.
-
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Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
Anybody knows why the IO bandwidth on a NT Intel box is that much
limited? Why it is that hard to get even close to 100 Mbyte/sec, if the
theoretical bandwidth of PCI can be much higher? like: 66Mhz x 32bit bus
= 66Mhz x4 byte = 266 Mbyte/sec?
What cause this difference between theoretical and practical
bandwidth? is it CPU, chipset, or cache coherence mechanism?
Is it just the ugly Operating System? Is possible to get more on a Linux
on Intel machine? On an Sgi/Irix, with THE SAME PCI bus you can easily
get over 200 Mbyte/sec...
What is the best disk read bandwidth on a Linux you have ever seen?
on which hardware?
Maybe the new Linux SGI file system (efs = xfs) is going to improve
this, or is it a hardware limitation of Intel boxes?.....
Lot of questions here.... put in your two cents of worth, please ;)
Best regards,
David, Roman.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.rutgers.edu
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/