Subject: Re: VaxStation 4000 model 60
To: Steven M. Schultz <sms@wlv.iipo.gtegsc.com>
From: Tom I Helbekkmo <tih@Hamartun.Priv.NO>
List: port-vax
Date: 01/10/1998 12:36:35
On Sat, 10 Jan 1998, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
> Ummm, not really. Both are hobbled by 'crippled' bus structures - the
> uVax-II by the multiplexed Qbus and the 386 by the ISA bus (which
> BTW is faster than the Qbus ;)).
But then again, the Qbus is a much better design -- much more flexible;
scales so much better it's in a different class altogether; there are
standardized configuration rules; and you get to decide for yourself
what relative priorities you want your hardware options to have.
> Now for sure a 8650 could move a *LOT* more I/O over multiple busses,
> but CPU wise (and if YOU're the only user) the 386 is faster than any
> VAX up thru the 8650.
I remember, getting on 10 years back now, I guess, compiling and running
"UNIX TeX" on two different non-UNIX platforms: a 12MHz 286 running DOS,
and a VAX 8700 running VMS. Evan when I had the VAX all to myself at
night, the PC would still beat it at TeXing documents.
Of course, when I started digging into this, and learned a bit about the
RMS file system, I found out why. I remember increasing the "IOzone"
benchmark results for that VAX by a factor of 100 just by adding a few
lines of C code to the benchmark source (buffering I/O to be able to use
fixed record length binary files instead of the CRLF-delimited stream
files that were the C run time default).
I sent my patches to the IOzone benchmark author, but he never replied.
-tih
--
Popularity is the hallmark of mediocrity. --Niles Crane, "Frasier"