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Date:      Fri, 26 Apr 1996 12:55:13 +0000 ()
From:      Thomas J Balfe <tbalfe@tioga.com>
To:        freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org
Subject:   AMD 5x86-133
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.91.960426124715.20191B-100000@falcon.tioga.com>

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A few nights ago I built an AMD based FreeBSD box that people might be 
interested in. It is based upon the Biostar MB-8433UUD motherboard and 
AMD 5x86-133 processor. The motherboard and processor together were $200
from a local computer store, although I've seen the same combo for $167
in Computer Shopper.

The motherboard features 256K L2 cache, three PCI slots, four ISA slots
and a ZIF socket. It will take 128MB although we have only 16MB 
installed. The motherboard already has an IDE controller and parallel and 
serial ports (16550), so you don't have to buy a seperate controller. It 
features Award BIOS.
   
If you have a spare case sitting around and need another machine, this
may be the way to go. I stuck it in an old Zeos case that a friend had,
as well as the IDE spare drives I had hanging around. (you bought them,
might as well use 'em)

nsieve.c was compiled on 2.1R with gcc-2.6.3

   Sieve of Eratosthenes (Scaled to 10 Iterations)
   Version 1.2b, 26 Sep 1992

   Array Size   Number   Last Prime     Linear    RunTime    MIPS
    (Bytes)   of Primes               Time(sec)    (Sec)
       8191       1899        16381      0.023      0.023    73.7
      10000       2261        19997      0.027      0.028    73.2
      20000       4202        39989      0.055      0.061    67.1
      40000       7836        79999      0.110      0.140    59.5
      80000      14683       160001      0.220      0.300    56.2
     160000      27607       319993      0.440      0.652    52.3
     320000      52073       639997      0.879      1.375    50.1
     640000      98609      1279997      1.758      2.996    46.4
    1280000     187133      2559989      3.516      6.341    44.3
    2560000     356243      5119997      7.033     13.163    43.1

   Relative to 10 Iterations and the 8191 Array Size:
   Average RunTime =    0.032 (sec)
   High  MIPS      =     73.7
   Low   MIPS      =     43.1

flops.c was compiled on 2.1R with gcc-2.6.3

   FLOPS C Program (Double Precision), V2.0 18 Dec 1992

   Module     Error        RunTime      MFLOPS
                            (usec)
     1     -1.5632e-13      1.9762      7.0841
     2     -1.0347e-13      1.3757      5.0883
     3     -3.1197e-14      1.9411      8.7578
     4      7.7938e-14      1.7007      8.8199
     5     -3.2641e-14      3.5206      8.2373
     6     -9.9920e-16      3.1383      9.2407
     7     -5.5650e-11      2.6136      4.5914
     8      2.7700e-14      3.2453      9.2441

   Iterations      =    8000000
   NullTime (usec) =     0.0893
   MFLOPS(1)       =     5.8959
   MFLOPS(2)       =     6.6869
   MFLOPS(3)       =     8.0504
   MFLOPS(4)       =     9.0769

Right now the machine (t-rex.tioga.com) is my ftp server and cu-seeme 
reflector (the BSDI binary). I might build another machine similar to 
this one for a pop box, scsi of course. 

The above benchmarks are at ftp.nosc.mil in /pub/aburto

So, for $200 or less and spare parts, you can have a decent machine. If 
you have seen these benchmarks already I apologize, but if not, then I 
hope this information comes in useful.



========================================================================
Thomas J Balfe                                          tbalfe@tioga.com
President                                          http://www.tioga.com/
Tioga Communications, Inc                                   814-867-4770
========================================================================





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