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Date:      Fri, 5 Nov 1999 10:47:30 -0800 (PST)
From:      "Eric J. Schwertfeger" <ejs@bfd.com>
To:        "Rodney W. Grimes" <freebsd@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
Cc:        Adam Strohl <adams@digitalspark.net>, "Daniel O'Connor" <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>, Darryl Okahata <darrylo@sr.hp.com>, freebsd-smp@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Dual Celeron + FreeBSD?
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.10.9911051041430.16049-100000@harlie.bfd.com>
In-Reply-To: <199911051829.KAA57885@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>

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On Fri, 5 Nov 1999, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:

> > I've done make buildworld's on both my dual Celeron and my dual PPro (the 
> > ones with 512K cache). The difference between single and dual celeron is
> > minimal, about 10%.  On the dual PPro machine, the speed improvement,
> > using the same disk subsystem, was 80%.  Yes, on processes that aren't
> > memory intensive, dual Celerons rock.  In fact, on most things, I see
> > closer to 40-50% improvement with dual Celerons, the make buildworld is
> > rather memory intensive.
> 
> Actually make buildworld is disk intensive... SMP plain out does not
> seem to help it much, unless of course you run a non-standard make
> world with -pipe, which then does make the memory bandwidth demand
> higher, and if both sides of the pipe just happen to get split accross
> 2 processors it causes the small cache to be ineffective and the memory
> system to be a major stall point.

Can't remember if I was using -pipe, this was a default 3.2 install,
except that I'm pretty sure I was using soft updates. I may have been,
because the HD lights would only flicker every few seconds, so it
definitely wasn't disk bound. I had /usr/src, /usr/obj, and /tmp all on
seperate spindles (each on a 4GB 7200 RPM SCSI drive).  Given other
people's comments, I'd really expect more than the 10% that I saw.



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