Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-18 Thread Lamar Owen
On Sunday, July 17, 2011 01:31:51 AM John R Pierce wrote:
 I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
 i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and 
 IIRC, ran at speeds from 25 to 100Mhz

Super minor correction: 486SX's at 16 and 20 MHz were available. And I 
think a 120MHz variation of 486DX4.  And then there was AMD's 5x86 at 133MHz.  
We have a few embedded boards running controllers that are still running 5x86's 
at 133MHz; about the same speed as a Pentium 75.

 i586 is the original pentium, at 60, 66, 90, 100 up to about 133Mhz

233 is the fastest Pentium MMX I've seen.  AMD's K5 and K6 series topped out at 
500; they're all i586-class procs.  AMD's Geode in same series.  Cyrix and 
later VIA C3-series chips go faster, but are still i586-class chips (up to 1GHz 
or so, maybe faster).  800MHz embedded C3's have been very popular in the 
embedded space.  And this class of chip is what many people would like to run 
C5 and C6 (and they are beefy enough to run text mode for either of these, 
really, since they would mostly be used as network devices with no local GUI).

 really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4 
 'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all 
 pipelined differently.   

Very very true.  Netburst is very different from Pentium M and Core 
architectures.

 as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core 
 I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization 
 strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.

Has to do with Core being descended from Pentium M architecture, which is 
essentially souped-up Pentium III.  The history of Pentium M is a fascinating 
study.
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-18 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Lamar Owen wrote:
 On Sunday, July 17, 2011 01:31:51 AM John R Pierce wrote:
 Super minor correction: 486SX's at 16 and 20 MHz were available. And I 
 think a 120MHz variation of 486DX4.  And then there was AMD's 5x86 at 133MHz. 
  We have a few embedded boards running controllers that are still running 
 5x86's at 133MHz; about the same speed as a Pentium 75.
 
Actually, 120MHz was AMD's baby and they achieved it with overclocking 
Bus from 33MHz to 40MHz (VLB only?).

-- 

Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

Google is the Mother, Google is the Father, and traceroute is your
trusty Spiderman...
StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread Drew
 really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4
 'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all
 pipelined differently.   as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core
 I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization
 strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.

gcc does have compiler flags (read up on -march  -mtune) for
optimizing to specific families of Intel CPU's. The problem is that
the performance improvement of tuning say an i7 to it's
family(-march=corei7) vs a generic i686 tune(-march=i686) is minimal
(less then 1% in benchmarks I've seen) and not worth the extra
complexity of managing entire branches of packages for specific
processor families. It makes sense however for the x86 vs x86-64 as
there's some pretty fundamental differences there.


-- 
Drew

Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Always Learning wrote:
 Centos 5.6 X86_64 is on two DVDs. Can not determine if -R or +R. However
 when installing, disk 2 is never required.


I used it on my first and only install. Of course I chose some extra 
packages, and that is why infrequently used packages are on the disk 2.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
david wrote:
 Just a thought
 
 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change) 
 disk doesn't quite fit on the DVD+, and needs a DVD-, this might put 
 some folks at an inconvenience.
 
 I wonder if the difference between fitting and not fitting is small 
 enough, so that some amount of pruning might make it fit on the DVD+R 
 image.  Some ways to prune could be:

CentOS 6.1 i386(mostly for compatibility sake I think) will come out on 
2 DVD-s also, that was already announced around a week ago, so that is 
already settled.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread Robert Heller
At Sat, 16 Jul 2011 22:31:51 -0700 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 
wrote:

 
 On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
  If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)
 
 I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
 i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and 
 IIRC, ran at speeds from 25 to 100Mhz

i486's included the FPU on-chip -- i386 either had a separate FPU chip
or used a kernel-supplied software FPU emulator (yes, 0.xx and 1.xx
kernels had the option of a software floating point math support).

 i586 is the original pentium, at 60, 66, 90, 100 up to about 133Mhz

AMD made K6's up to 500mhz -- i586 processors

 i686 is the pentium pro and pentium-II, -III, -IV and everything newer.
 
 i686 added a few minor new instructions but also has additional memory 
 management functionality missing from the earlier versions.
 
 its just gotten silly to try and keep backwards support for the early 
 versions of the CPUs that have been obsolete for so long.
 
 really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4 
 'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all 
 pipelined differently.   as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core 
 I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization 
 strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.
 
 

-- 
Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / hel...@deepsoft.com
Deepwoods Software-- http://www.deepsoft.com/
()  ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail
/\  www.asciiribbon.org   -- against proprietary attachments



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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread david
At 10:31 PM 7/16/2011, you wrote:
On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
  If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)

I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and
IIRC, ran at speeds from 25 to 100Mhz
i586 is the original pentium, at 60, 66, 90, 100 up to about 133Mhz
i686 is the pentium pro and pentium-II, -III, -IV and everything newer.

i686 added a few minor new instructions but also has additional memory
management functionality missing from the earlier versions.

its just gotten silly to try and keep backwards support for the early
versions of the CPUs that have been obsolete for so long.

really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4
'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all
pipelined differently.   as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core
I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization
strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.


--
john r pierceN 37, W 122
santa cruz ca mid-left coast


Folks
My initial post was perhaps mis-stated.  I don't have any problem 
with dropping processors before the Pentium class machines (aka 
I686), my question was only a naming question.

Why are some RPMs named  el6.i386, and some with el6.i686.  It must 
make automated package selection algorithms more difficult.

David 

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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
david wrote:
 At 10:31 PM 7/16/2011, you wrote:
 On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)
 I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
 i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and
 IIRC, ran at speeds from 25 to 100Mhz
 i586 is the original pentium, at 60, 66, 90, 100 up to about 133Mhz
 i686 is the pentium pro and pentium-II, -III, -IV and everything newer.

 i686 added a few minor new instructions but also has additional memory
 management functionality missing from the earlier versions.

 its just gotten silly to try and keep backwards support for the early
 versions of the CPUs that have been obsolete for so long.

 really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4
 'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all
 pipelined differently.   as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core
 I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization
 strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.


 --
 john r pierceN 37, W 122
 santa cruz ca mid-left coast
 
 
 Folks
 My initial post was perhaps mis-stated.  I don't have any problem 
 with dropping processors before the Pentium class machines (aka 
 I686), my question was only a naming question.
 
 Why are some RPMs named  el6.i386, and some with el6.i686.  It must 
 make automated package selection algorithms more difficult.
 
Packages are created by large number of various people for number of 
different distros. i386 marks packages that will run on older CPU's, 
i686 packages that will run only on PII and newer CPU's. It is simple as 
that. Changing everything to i686 would only wreck havoc for distros 
supporting older CPU's. This would be the jest of the (I am sure more 
complex) matter.

Ljubomir

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[CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-16 Thread david
Just a thought

If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change) 
disk doesn't quite fit on the DVD+, and needs a DVD-, this might put 
some folks at an inconvenience.

I wonder if the difference between fitting and not fitting is small 
enough, so that some amount of pruning might make it fit on the DVD+R 
image.  Some ways to prune could be:

a)  Create two versions of the DVD, one with all the non-ideographic 
languages included, and one with the ideographic languares and a 
subset of the alphabet languages (English, German, French, ...)

b)  Find some less used but large package which presumes internet 
access.  It could be downloaded with YUM

c)  Tackle the code bloat (oh yah, sure)

David

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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-16 Thread Always Learning

On Sat, 2011-07-16 at 19:50 -0700, david wrote:

 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change) 
 disk doesn't quite fit on the DVD+, and needs a DVD-, this might put 
 some folks at an inconvenience.
 
 I wonder if the difference between fitting and not fitting is small 
 enough, so that some amount of pruning might make it fit on the DVD+R 
 image.  Some ways to prune could be:
 
 a)  Create two versions of the DVD, one with all the non-ideographic 
 languages included, and one with the ideographic languares and a 
 subset of the alphabet languages (English, German, French, ...)
 
 b)  Find some less used but large package which presumes internet 
 access.  It could be downloaded with YUM
 
 c)  Tackle the code bloat (oh yah, sure)

Centos 5.6 X86_64 is on two DVDs. Can not determine if -R or +R. However
when installing, disk 2 is never required.


With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
 Just a thought

 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)
 disk doesn't quite fit on the DVD+, and needs a DVD-, this might put
 some folks at an inconvenience.

 I wonder if the difference between fitting and not fitting is small
 enough, so that some amount of pruning might make it fit on the DVD+R
 image.  Some ways to prune could be:

 a)  Create two versions of the DVD, one with all the non-ideographic
 languages included, and one with the ideographic languares and a
 subset of the alphabet languages (English, German, French, ...)

 b)  Find some less used but large package which presumes internet
 access.  It could be downloaded with YUM

 c)  Tackle the code bloat (oh yah, sure)

d) use the netinstall CD (or PXE or USB stick), put a repo mirror on a 
local http server, and install from there.


-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 122
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-16 Thread Drew
 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)

I think on CentOS/RHEL it's because they dropped support for the 586 
earlier processors. Linux wide there's been a general drop in support
for 386 class machines. Something to do with recent versions of glibc
and a instruction only present in the 486 and better.


-- 
Drew

Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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Re: [CentOS] About I386 not fitting on one DVD

2011-07-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
 If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)

I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and 
IIRC, ran at speeds from 25 to 100Mhz
i586 is the original pentium, at 60, 66, 90, 100 up to about 133Mhz
i686 is the pentium pro and pentium-II, -III, -IV and everything newer.

i686 added a few minor new instructions but also has additional memory 
management functionality missing from the earlier versions.

its just gotten silly to try and keep backwards support for the early 
versions of the CPUs that have been obsolete for so long.

really, we should have compiler targets for optimizing on the P4 
'netburst' CPUs and another for the core processors as they are all 
pipelined differently.   as it turns out, however, the core 2 and core 
I3/5/7 do pretty well with pentium-II and -III style optimization 
strategies, as well as, of course, the x86_64 support.


-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 122
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

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