On Wed, Sep 07, 2011 at 01:58:56PM +0200, Ingo Jürgensmann wrote: > On Wed, 7 Sep 2011 13:51:10 +0200, Wouter Verhelst wrote: > > >I doubt m68k machines will slow down because of NBD. The very > >first NBD > >installation that I did was on quickstep, back when its SCSI > >driver was > >still rather crap. It was faster over NBD than it was to local disk. > >Running Debian/m68k was the reason why I started doing NBD in the > >first > >place :-) > > Erm! Veto! ;) > > On Amigas I get 2-4.5 MB/s from SCSI disks, whereas I rarely got > more than 400 kB/s via network. Even when I would, all Amiga network > cards I know and own are limited to 10 Mbps, so you'll never go > beyond 1.2 MB/s. > I happened to get 700-900 kB/s under AmigaOS, though. > > But yes, on Macs SCSI was always slow, afair... ;-)
I still haven't found the time to get it working in Linux, but I did find and buy a 100BaseT NuBus card. It even has a chip on it that appears to be the same one as in some cards that are supported on x86, so it might even be relatively simple. I don't expect to actually get close to 100Mb/s out of it since NuBus only runs at either 10 or 20MHz, but it should beat out the 10BaseT cards. The SCSI performance on a Mac depends a lot on the hardware. My IIfx was so slow that I think I let it run for two days doing a dist-upgrade of a minimal install. The disks do something in the 100kB/s range as I recall. Most other Macs are much better. I recently acquired an FWB JackHammer card, which can take 68-pin SCSI drives. It uses an NCR 53c720, so it should be possible to get it working and get much better SCSI performance than the built-in SCSI interfaces of any Mac (including ppc models). Brad Boyer f...@allandria.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-68k-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110909063612.ga5...@cynthia.pants.nu