Author: Matt Taylor
Date: 04:38:39 03/18/03
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On March 18, 2003 at 00:01:44, Robert Hyatt wrote: >On March 17, 2003 at 22:59:30, Aaron Gordon wrote: > >>On March 17, 2003 at 18:47:27, Eugene Nalimov wrote: >> >>>I just run the experiment. I used 2 otherwise identical 64-bit systems, one with >>>3Mb of L3 cache, other with 1.5Mb. Machine with bigger cache run Crafty's >>>"bench" comman 12% faster (1 CPU). >>> >>>That means that >>>(1) Crafty's working set don't fit into 1.5Mb, >>>(2) For systems with cache 1.5Mb or less (i.e. for almost all x86 systems) for >>>Crafty memory speed matter. >>> >>>Thanks, >>>Eugene >> >>Those types of systems aren't what people normally use. Most people here have a >>Pentium 3, Athlon, Pentium 4, etc. Here is something I found with Crafty. >> >>Using the Nforce2 chipset I'm able to run the ram at speeds from 50% up to 200% >>(100% being synchronous) of the fsb speed. I tested 200MHz FSB (400DDR) with >>200MHz memory (400DDR) and 200fsb with 100MHz memory (200DDR). >>The difference between ~1.6gb/s memory and ~3.2gb/s memory with craftys 'bench' >>command was 0.14%. Yes, about one seventh of one percent. > >That might well suggest _another_ bottleneck in that particular machine.... What would that be? I ran a similar test on my AthlonXP 2500 w/nForce 2 chipset. Running the memory bus at 100 MHz or 133 MHz didn't make a significant difference in nps. The processor scored around 1.12 MN/s, and it scored some 20-30 KN/s more with a 133 MHz memory bus. The FSB was 166 MHz in both cases. -Matt
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