32MB on new Sparc Server?

Alexander Dupuy dupuy at cs.columbia.edu
Thu May 11 21:58:24 AEST 1989


>From the price list, it would seem that the Sun-4/300 series comes with 8
megabytes on the CPU card, and that expansion memory cards of 24 megabytes
are available - as this is the most reasonable combination for the two
available memory sizes: 32 and 56.

What's most interesting is that this is _not_ ECC memory like the
Sun-4/200 series uses, but apparently only parity-checked.  Parity
checking is fine when you don't have much memory, since failures are less
common, but once your memory size starts getting up there (56 megabytes is
quite a bit for a Sun) the possibility of chip failures tends to increase
proportionally.

With ECC memory, you can run for quite a while with a marginal (or even
broken) chip - certainly long enough to get a replacement board or to
schedule downtime to replace the failing chip (the ECC subsystems usually
give you enough information to pinpoint the failing chip).

I guess Sun either has a lot of confidence in their memory chip suppliers,
or they're trying to increase the sales of 2-hour response maintenance
contracts.  :-) I heard from a friend that a Sun salesthing let slip that
Sun were not terribly pleased with the new memory architecture on the -300
series, and that there probably wouldn't be any other machines in that
series.  One possibility is that marketing (price/performance and
competitive) considerations played a role in the memory design.

In response to your second question, there is a good reason why you might
want to have a server with 32 megabytes just to serve 10+ diskless
clients: disk caching.  Under 4.0, almost all of memory is potentially
available for I/O buffering.  A diskless client which goes across the
ethernet to access disk which is cached in memory there will almost
certainly see better response times than a diskful client going to a
relatively slow SCSI disk.

@alex
-- 
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