#4
Post
by vital-analitix » Fri May 26, 2006 3:28 pm
Zone,
glad that my update was useful to someone.
Don't fix which ain't broke they'll say.
It's also my motto, unfortunately I am running into performance issues with my "work" and the setup is barely fast enough to keep up with the datastream. I have a very annoying screenflicker when the machine is running flat out and every little improvement helps.
This is not a gaming machine and reliability goes above anything else. Downtime in the middle of my "work" can have some big $$$ penalties.
When I started to observe the sounds I felt something was not right and then it was a matter of reverting the backups to see where it was gone. Then from the notes that I keep (I put in a small text file every single change I make to the system, an old system administrators / DBA habit) it is easily to figure out which change had a particular effect.
One thing I like a lot (and what I found on this board, thanks to A31pguy) is the Intel Application Accelerator. I do some regular exports of a database and about 100 M datapoints under the 1.8 Ghz B0 step CPU used to take around 27 minutes. With the 2.6 Ghz (D1 stepping) and Intel Application Accelerator installed it now takes 4 min 32 seconds!
Edit: cannot really work out why the 2.2 Ghz C1 stepping CPU takes around 7 minutes. Am suspecting the secret lies in the different microcode as indicated by the different stepping, must be some pre-fetch logic there at work. Whatever it is, it was welcome.
I found references on the web on this particular CPU series that were a very interesting read. There was some project going on trying to figure out how to enable the "hidden" hyper threading in the Mobile Pentium 4-m processors. Some of the processors apperently have it built in, there is mentioning from C0 step onwards on CPU's of 2 Ghz and above. I don't know but seeing the performance increase due to the IAA may well mean that this is true. It is s similar performance increase I saw on my son's PC when I enabled in the BIOS hyperthreading on his PC (was turned off....)
However the difference between going from 1.8 to 2.2 Ghz is bigger than from 2.2 to 2.6 Ghz. My observation is that with the 2.6 Ghz I am starting to run into I/O bandwidth problems (memory?, not HD, did test with even faster HD and no difference in my case. More memory deteriorated the performance, optimal is 378 - 640 Mb here).
But I am happy to have found the 2.6 (new locally and at a reasonable costs) and moving the 2.2 to my backup machine. No regrets.
(Having been trained in electronics an very familiar with Quality Assurance and antistatic procedures I never trust electronics that have been handled by others (secondhand). Not when there are big $$$ on the line. This is why I am not too worried about the lesser performance increase of 2.2 => 2.6 than of going from 1.8 => 2.2. )
Hope this helps
Marinus
Z61m 94515CM with 2 Gb memory, T61p 6459A12 Windows 7 Prof 4 Gb memory, daughter 1: Lenovo N200, son: R61, retired:A31, 2652-M5M, A31, 2652-XKX, daugther 2: retired R60