Re: [Question] Explanation of zero-copy networking

From: Eric W. Biederman (ebiederm@xmission.com)
Date: Wed May 09 2001 - 10:13:36 EST


Jamie Lokier <lk@tantalophile.demon.co.uk> writes:

> Richard B. Johnson wrote:
> > However, PCI to memory copying runs at about 300 megabytes per
> > second on modern PCs and memory to memory copying runs at over 1,000
> > megabytes per second. In the future, these speeds will increase.
>
> That would be "big expensive modern PCs" then. Our clusters of 700MHz
> boxes are strictly limited to 132 megabytes per second over PCI...

300 Megabytes per second is definitely an odd number for a PCI bus.
But 132 Megabytes per second is actually high, the continuous burst
speeds are:
32bit 33Mhz: 33*1000*1000*32/(1024*1024*8) = 125.8 Megabytes/second
64bit 33Mhz: 33*1000*1000*64/(1024*1024*8) = 251.7 Megabytes/second
32bit 66Mhz: 66*1000*1000*32/(1024*1024*8) = 251.7 Megabytes/second
64bit 66Mhz: 66*1000*1000*64/(1024*1024*8) = 503.4 Megabytes/second

The possibility of getting a continuous bursts is actually low, if
nothing else you have an interrupt acknowledgement 100 times per
second. But if you are pushing the bus it should deliver close to
it's burst potential. But the ISA traffic doing subtractive decode
can be nasty because you get 4 PCI cycles before you even get
acknowledgement from the PCI/ISA bridge that you there is something to
transfer to.

Eric
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue May 15 2001 - 21:00:32 EST