Re: [PATCH] Document huge memory/cache overhead of memorycontroller in Kconfig

From: Pavel Machek
Date: Wed Feb 20 2008 - 13:51:16 EST


On Wed 2008-02-20 19:28:03, Jan Engelhardt wrote:
>
> On Feb 20 2008 18:19, Pavel Machek wrote:
> >>
> >> For ordinary desktop people, memory controller is what developers
> >> know as MMU or sometimes even some other mysterious piece of silicon
> >> inside the heavy box.
> >
> >Actually I'd guess 'memory controller' == 'DRAM controller' == part of
> >northbridge that talks to DRAM.
>
> Yeah that must have been it when Windows says it found a new controller
> after changing the mainboard underneath.

Just for fun... this option really has to be renamed:

Memory controller
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The memory controller is a chip on a computer's motherboard or CPU die
which manages the flow of data going to and from the memory.

Most computers based on an Intel processor have a memory controller
implemented on their motherboard's north bridge, though some modern
microprocessors, such as AMD's Athlon 64 and Opteron processors, IBM's
POWER5, and Sun Microsystems UltraSPARC T1 have a memory controller on
the CPU die to reduce the memory latency.

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