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Comments on ‘AMD readies HyperFlash cache tech’Friday 18th May 2007 05:02 GMT
K.I.S.S!
Oliver • Friday 18th May 2007 06:16 GMT
I am admittedly ignorant of the full operation of these new super-giga-boost caches, but what is the point? How are these different to adding extra RAM? I would have thought that one could adapt the standard RAM interface and improve its throughput in order to support other data transfers, such as those more related to data normally carried by the hard disk. Surely we should be simplifying and integrating computer architecture, not adding more components that may well be outdated when faster flash storage comes to the mainstream market. OR - With all these caches about in chips, hardisks, RAM and now the motherboard, is it pointing to some sort of distributed chache architecure? Confused! It's a very brave (aka. foolish) idea...
Anonymous Coward • Friday 18th May 2007 07:01 GMT
to integrate a proprietary extension into a motherboard which has a chip that will die after a certain number of writes. Performance will slowly degrade as more pages of the flash chip go bad and it can't be replaced because it's a proprietary technolgy and chanches are low for finding a replacement module in shops. Also there are many nice connection protocols there which can be used to interface a flash module. How about sata or a pci-express 1 bus? Cpu-s with native pci-e controllers could even use them as memory mapped devices, which is a fast, standard and cheap way. (usually video cards share their ram this way but 286 era ems and intel's new flash solution used it too) Umm...
Anonymous Coward • Friday 18th May 2007 14:17 GMT
The article didn't state that the flash wasn't replaceable or integrated into the chip, just the 'link' which I took as a bus controller of sorts. I suppose one could read "a bank of Flash storage" as being either however memory slots are often referred to as 'bank 0,' 'bank 1' etc. and nobody speaks of them not being fixed in place. This cache is managed differently
Proton Wrangler • Friday 18th May 2007 16:52 GMT
To Oliver, the first commentator: This is a non-volatile cache, so it's ready after being shut-off. The transfer rate from flash is not really better than a hard drive, but access is so much faster that by putting the most used bit of start-up libraries and favorite applications in flash the overall performance feels much snappier at the times when the waits are most annoying. It's different from a traditional most-recently used cache scheme (CPU cache and filesystem RAM cache) in that once you shown a pattern of commonly used files, they'll live in flash with relatively little turn over. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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