* [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS
@ 2008-05-25 11:40 Peter Humphrey
2008-05-25 16:02 ` Mike Doty
2008-05-25 16:31 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan
0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2008-05-25 11:40 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-amd64
I was poking around in my BIOS this morning and rediscovered a setting to
define the installed OS. I'd wondered about it some time ago and then
forgotten about it.
I can set the BIOS setting "OS Installation" to "Other" or to "64bit Linux
2.6.9". I have it set to Other at the moment. My questions are: what effect
this setting is likely to have, and whether it's really specific to the
version.
This is a Supermicro H8DCE motherboard with dual Opteron 246s and 4GB RAM in
four banks, two connected to each CPU.
I've tried Google but found nothing.
--
Rgds
Peter
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* Re: [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS
2008-05-25 11:40 [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS Peter Humphrey
@ 2008-05-25 16:02 ` Mike Doty
2008-05-27 11:09 ` Peter Humphrey
2008-05-25 16:31 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan
1 sibling, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Mike Doty @ 2008-05-25 16:02 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-amd64
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Peter Humphrey wrote:
| I was poking around in my BIOS this morning and rediscovered a setting to
| define the installed OS. I'd wondered about it some time ago and then
| forgotten about it.
|
| I can set the BIOS setting "OS Installation" to "Other" or to "64bit
Linux
| 2.6.9". I have it set to Other at the moment. My questions are: what
effect
| this setting is likely to have, and whether it's really specific to the
| version.
|
| This is a Supermicro H8DCE motherboard with dual Opteron 246s and 4GB
RAM in
| four banks, two connected to each CPU.
|
| I've tried Google but found nothing.
|
Supermicro would be able to tell you. It most likely affects boot order
and/or ACPI tables/features.
- --
=======================================================
Mike Doty kingtaco -at- gentoo.org
Gentoo Infrastructure
Gentoo/AMD64 Strategic Lead
GPG: E1A5 1C9C 93FE F430 C1D6 F2AF 806B A2E4 19F4 AE05
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* [gentoo-amd64] Re: OS setting in BIOS
2008-05-25 11:40 [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS Peter Humphrey
2008-05-25 16:02 ` Mike Doty
@ 2008-05-25 16:31 ` Duncan
1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Duncan @ 2008-05-25 16:31 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-amd64
Peter Humphrey <peter@humphrey.ukfsn.org> posted
200805251240.17699.peter@humphrey.ukfsn.org, excerpted below, on Sun, 25
May 2008 12:40:17 +0100:
> I was poking around in my BIOS this morning and rediscovered a setting
> to define the installed OS. I'd wondered about it some time ago and then
> forgotten about it.
>
> I can set the BIOS setting "OS Installation" to "Other" or to "64bit
> Linux 2.6.9". I have it set to Other at the moment. My questions are:
> what effect this setting is likely to have, and whether it's really
> specific to the version.
>
> This is a Supermicro H8DCE motherboard with dual Opteron 246s and 4GB
> RAM in four banks, two connected to each CPU.
>
> I've tried Google but found nothing.
Hmm... The most apropos thing I could find with Linux 2.6.9 was that it
introduced AMD dual-core support. This of course assumes that your board
is upgradable to dual-cores or that's obviously /not/ what it's
referencing. Anyway, Opteron 246s are still single-cores, so if that's
it, the setting probably won't matter to you at this point. However, if
you upgrade to dual-cores, you may wish to try toggling that setting
along with your kernel config updates turning on multi-core support, or
it's likely not to work quite as efficiently.
I'm guessing the alternative presents the cores as separate CPUs, less
confusing for the OS if it didn't know about multi-cores, but not as
efficient scheduling as you'd get with the kernel's multi-core scheduling
support, which with multi-core scheduling enabled, knows they are on the
same chip and thus that it costs less to transfer a job from one core to
the other than to a core on another chip.
I'm not sure about it, but the more I think about it, the more likely
that possibility seems to me. If that's not it, it's sure a good fit for
the bit we /do/ know, that (1) the option is 64-bit related (the option
says so), that (2) it's a kernel 2.6.9 change (the option says so), that
(3) it's Linux specific (the option says so), that (4) it's an AMD
system, and that (5) the matching kernel (2+3) added support for the
matching brand (4) and that it was 64-bit related (1). If that's a
simply coincidental set of matches, it's VERY coincidental.
--
Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs.
"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman
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* Re: [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS
2008-05-25 16:02 ` Mike Doty
@ 2008-05-27 11:09 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2008-05-27 11:09 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-amd64
On Sunday 25 May 2008 17:02:07 Mike Doty wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> | I was poking around in my BIOS this morning and rediscovered a setting
> | to define the installed OS. I'd wondered about it some time ago and
> | then forgotten about it.
> |
> | I can set the BIOS setting "OS Installation" to "Other" or to "64bit
> Linux
> | 2.6.9". I have it set to Other at the moment. My questions are: what
> effect
> | this setting is likely to have, and whether it's really specific to the
> | version.
> |
> | This is a Supermicro H8DCE motherboard with dual Opteron 246s and 4GB
> RAM in
> | four banks, two connected to each CPU.
> |
> | I've tried Google but found nothing.
>
> Supermicro would be able to tell you. It most likely affects boot order
> and/or ACPI tables/features.
Well, I tried it to see. At the next boot, one of the two drives in software
RAID-1 had two faulty partitions, and the whole physical disk seemed to be
the cause of numerous long timeouts and resulting failure messages during
boot. So I've put it back :-)
The problem could equally have been due to a dodgy disk, or even the SATA
interface on the motherboard. I'll have to keep an eye on it.
Sometimes an experiment results in a lot of work - in this case, multi-GB of
backup and restore, and I've still to found out why the rescue system,
which is on an ordinary IDE disk, won't boot. Too many coincidences for my
liking.
--
Rgds
Peter
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2008-05-25 11:40 [gentoo-amd64] OS setting in BIOS Peter Humphrey
2008-05-25 16:02 ` Mike Doty
2008-05-27 11:09 ` Peter Humphrey
2008-05-25 16:31 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan
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