tblader
2007-Mar-29 13:19 UTC
[CentOS] DDR2 compile times (was Re: segfaults with 8 gig of ram)
Hello All. Below are some compile times for 2.6.20 on an fx-62 running Centos64 with various 2 gig sticks of dual channel ram (See previous posts with subject of 'segfaults with 8gig of ram' for more details.) It seems dual channel will compile a kernel faster, but only gained around 30 seconds over 20 minutes. Below are the shortest/longest compile times of several compiles done over the weekend. Compile consisted of make menuconfig (save .config) time make dep clean bzImage modules 2 sticks dual channel @800mhz 10 samples ===============================real 791.46 user 664.10 sys 93.85 real 799.88 user 665.30 sys 93.87 4 sticks dual channel @400mhz 5 samples (before it hurled booting) ===============================real 876.19 user 712.98 sys 116.18 real 846.06 user 710.16 sys 115.42 3 sticks single channel @800mhz 6 samples ===============================real 815.74 user 673.73 sys 108.30 real 822.95 user 674.32 sys 108.62 -- Flambeau Inc. Technology Center - Baraboo, WI Email : tblader at flambeau.com Keyserver: http://pgp.mit.edu KeyID: 0x00E9EC2C
Peter Gross
2007-Mar-29 14:40 UTC
[CentOS] DDR2 compile times (was Re: segfaults with 8 gig of ram)
tblader wrote:> Hello All. > Below are some compile times for 2.6.20 on an fx-62 > running Centos64 with various 2 gig sticks of > dual channel ram (See previous posts with subject > of 'segfaults with 8gig of ram' for more details.) > > It seems dual channel will compile a kernel faster, > but only gained around 30 seconds over 20 minutes. > Below are the shortest/longest compile times of > several compiles done over the weekend. > > Compile consisted of make menuconfig (save .config) > time make dep clean bzImage modules > > > 2 sticks dual channel @800mhz > 10 samples > ===============================> real 791.46 > user 664.10 > sys 93.85 > > real 799.88 > user 665.30 > sys 93.87 > > > 4 sticks dual channel @400mhz > 5 samples (before it hurled booting) > ===============================> real 876.19 > user 712.98 > sys 116.18 > > real 846.06 > user 710.16 > sys 115.42 > > > > 3 sticks single channel @800mhz > 6 samples > ===============================> real 815.74 > user 673.73 > sys 108.30 > > real 822.95 > user 674.32 > sys 108.62 > >I am putting together a pretty high-end workstation and originally had ordered 2gb sticks. Here's my [main] hardware specs: Abit AB9 QaudGT motherboard Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Seasonic M12 PSU 3 Seagate 250gb SATA II disks Since my main goal is to run VMWare Workstation with host OS Centos 5 (when it comes out), I was originally interested in using 8gb memory. But after posting the following thread on the Abit motherboard forums, I discovered that the Intel P965 Express chipset does not fully support PC6400 (800) DDR2 memory: http://forum.abit-usa.com/showthread.php?t=121720 So I returned that memory and went with 4 1gb sticks of low latency (4-4-3-8) memory instead, trading memory capacity for performance.
Scott Silva
2007-Mar-29 17:45 UTC
[CentOS] Re: DDR2 compile times (was Re: segfaults with 8 gig of ram)
tblader spake the following on 3/29/2007 6:19 AM:> Hello All. > Below are some compile times for 2.6.20 on an fx-62 > running Centos64 with various 2 gig sticks of > dual channel ram (See previous posts with subject > of 'segfaults with 8gig of ram' for more details.) > > It seems dual channel will compile a kernel faster, > but only gained around 30 seconds over 20 minutes. > Below are the shortest/longest compile times of > several compiles done over the weekend. > > Compile consisted of make menuconfig (save .config) > time make dep clean bzImage modules > > > 2 sticks dual channel @800mhz > 10 samples > ===============================> real 791.46 > user 664.10 > sys 93.85 > > real 799.88 > user 665.30 > sys 93.87 > > > 4 sticks dual channel @400mhz > 5 samples (before it hurled booting) > ===============================> real 876.19 > user 712.98 > sys 116.18 > > real 846.06 > user 710.16 > sys 115.42 > > > > 3 sticks single channel @800mhz > 6 samples > ===============================> real 815.74 > user 673.73 > sys 108.30 > > real 822.95 > user 674.32 > sys 108.62 > >Dual channel at 400Mhz and single channel at 800mhz... Single channel at twice the speed would be pretty close to equal. Now if you did dual channel at 800mhz you might see a difference. Try a test with 2 sticks so you can get back to dual channel, put the memory back up to its SPD detected speed and test that. http://www.abit-usa.com/test-report/kn9.htm shows the tested memory with that board. -- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't!!!!