On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 10:42 AM, Derrick Lobo wrote:
> This is surely NVME hardware both motherboard and drive support nvme.
> Using ubuntu liveboot disk utility I was able to gt 3.8gb read and write
> speed..
FreeBSD is able to get that from the NVMe drives we buy at work for our OCA
boxes (the
derrick.l...@givex.com (Derrick Lobo) writes:
>ppb2: link is x4 @ 8.0GT/s
>pci3 at ppb2 bus 4
>pci3: i/o space, memory space enabled, rd/line, wr/inv ok
>nvme0 at pci3 dev 0 function 0: vendor 8086 product 0953 (rev. 0x01)
>nvme0: NVMe 1.0
>nvme0: for admin queue interrupting at msix2 vec 0
>nvme
This is surely NVME hardware both motherboard and drive support nvme.
Using ubuntu liveboot disk utility I was able to gt 3.8gb read and write
speed..
/sbin/dmesg |grep nvme
nvme0 at pci3 dev 0 function 0: vendor 8086 product 0953 (rev. 0x01)
nvme0: NVMe 1.0
nvme0: for admin queue interrupting at
On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 03:07:32PM +0200, Riccardo Mottola wrote:
> apart that my personal feeling is that BigEndian is correct and
> LittleEndian is wrong...
Definitively!
> I would propose PowerPC, being sure that it is used BE and not LE, since
> most CPUs can do both, it depends on the plat
On Sun, Aug 07, 2016 at 11:46:49PM -0700, Hal Murray wrote:
>
> I'm looking for a low cost wrong endian system so I can verify (or debug)
> software that is supposed to be widely portable. Used/eBay is fine.
>
> Is there anything obvious I should be looking at? Or anything to avoid?
Cubietruc
Hi,
Hal Murray wrote:
b...@update.uu.se said:
>Define "wrong endian".
The non-Intel way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness
apart that my personal feeling is that BigEndian is correct and
LittleEndian is wrong...
I would propose PowerPC, being sure that it is used BE and not LE
On 2016-08-08 10:49, Hal Murray wrote:
b...@update.uu.se said:
Define "wrong endian".
The non-Intel way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness
I know about the different byte orderings. I have never seen anyone
assume that one was right, and any others were wrong before. So it was
ve
Am 08.08.2016 um 10:49 schrieb Hal Murray:
The non-Intel way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness
So I suppose you mean big endian... Have a look at NetBSD/sandpoint for
real HW. These NAS boxes are all big endian and should be easy (and
cheap) to come by.
Felix
b...@update.uu.se said:
> Define "wrong endian".
The non-Intel way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness
> And maybe a simulator?
That's an interesting idea. Thanks.
I'm interested in things like ntp and gpsd so it would have to
simulate/emulate networking and serial ports.
--
These
On 2016-08-08 08:46, Hal Murray wrote:
I'm looking for a low cost wrong endian system so I can verify (or debug)
software that is supposed to be widely portable. Used/eBay is fine.
Is there anything obvious I should be looking at? Or anything to avoid?
Define "wrong endian".
And maybe a si
I'm looking for a low cost wrong endian system so I can verify (or debug)
software that is supposed to be widely portable. Used/eBay is fine.
Is there anything obvious I should be looking at? Or anything to avoid?
--
These are my opinions. I hate spam.
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