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[QUOTE=garo]cache size : 512 KB
This is a production server so a reboot to get into the BIOS is not possible. I did not build it so I do not know what the mem settings and FSB are. Do you know if there is another way of finding out the FSB at least?[/QUOTE] Some tools (like CPU-Z) might find out that information. We can assume, that the FSB runs at 133 MHz (*4=533), since all models I know, which had 2.8 GHz and Gallatin core (should be the one with 512 kB L2), also had FSB533. BTW, CPU-Z or CPU Info etc. could even tell something about memory timings. But this could depend on if they know the chipset. |
It's a Dell PowerEdge. And there don't seem to be any tools for Linux AFAIK.
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[QUOTE=garo]It's a Dell PowerEdge. And there don't seem to be any tools for Linux AFAIK.[/QUOTE]Then it is very likely, that the FSB is running at 133 MHz. As far as I can see, only the 1MB L2 Xeons (Nocona) have FSB800 in the PowerEdge servers.
So FSB800 + 2x1MB L2 + unbuffered RAM (likely with very good timings) push the Pentium D to being rather effective in running Prime95 (at least according to the results presented in the benchmark thread). |
Sounds reasonable. I run work-related simualtions on that machine all the time and a 2.6 GHz ordinary P4 Northwood with PC3200 unbuffered easily outperforms the Xeon machine. But I guess, when accuracy is more important than speed.....
I would be interested to see if there is a comparison between Pentium D and dual Xeons on identical setups, i.e. same FSB, same L2 cache etc, same RAM timings etc. |
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