NetBSD Ported To SGI 02 52
NetBSD have added another platform to their supported hardware list. As the NetBSD/sgimips and announcement pages say, NetBSD/sgimips is now stable enough to run multi-user, making NetBSD the first OpenSource OS to run on the SGI O2. Currently it's known to work on the R5000 CPU, R10K and R12K are untested due to lack of hardware.
Re:Indy's? (Score:1)
100MHz no l2 cache though. So i got the 24-bit gfx card and the 200MHz 1Mb l2 cache upgrades for a further 200 odd quid.. making a total of approx 800 USD.
Makes a superb workstation..
--
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
With regard to irix support/devel tapering off, have you seen sgi's roadmap? (http://www.sgi.com/developers/feature/2000/irix_
SGI is going strong on irix, and will be for a long, long time. All that is changing is they are hiring *new* people to work on linux.
Of course, you also have to keep in mind that the hardare in the O2 came out about four years ago, that's a pretty long time in hardware-time. PCs still don't have the memory bandwidth of the O2 I don't think.
Re:Try $500 for an Indy (Score:1)
For prices, checkout
www.reputable.com
www.recurrent.com
www.mce.com
I'm still waiting to get a "good" port of SGI Hardhat Linux for it, but BSD is great in my eyes I'll see if I can spin it up on one of our 10k Origin boxes though....
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
Re:Work on Indy? (Score:2)
Re:Indy's? (Score:1)
Put a matrox card in your PC and use the monitor with Sync-on-green under X.
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
After doing a comparison with a machine more like the above, also keep in mind quake[all versions] was designed with fairly basic pc 3d cards in mind, thus it doesn't try to do anything normally expensive (time wise), which on an Impact card may not even change the speed at all. As for the cost of an Indigo2, I recently purchased a 250MHz L2 cache I2 with MaxImpact graphics, 256MB ram, 4.5GB drive, dds-2 drive, cdrom, 20" monitor, and all the standard for less than $600. Not too bad. You could buy a pc with a faster cpu for less, but try to buy a pc with the same amount of ram and a 20" monitor, you'll be pressed to do so.
Not to get into a "this box is better" war , but some sgi workstations are very well priced against pcs, you just have to look for the right ones, and know what you want (hint: if you want the fastest dnet scores, get a pc with 8mb of ram). Oh, and keep in mind that the Indigo2 did come out in 1993! And Indigo2 Impact in 1995. In 1993 the pentium pro was of course non-existant, in 1995 the pentium pro was just hitting production lines (just to give you something to compare it with).
*sigh* (Score:1)
Re:How quick? (Score:1)
If you want great OpenGL speed, get an Indigo2 Impact
?? My freind has a stacked out Indigo2 impact and my 550 AMD K6-2, 256meg, voodoo3 kicks it's ass in every aspect, Quake2, Blender...
My Indigo 2 (teal, 100 MHZ 96 megs ram) gets beat by my 300 MHZ K6-2, 128 RAM, ATI rage graphics...
The sad thing is that each Indigo2's cost 4 times what I paid for BOTH PCs combined. And this is with buying them used off ebay last year and buying the pc new from online vendors.
My Indigo2 starts to rip and drop frames in the "bouncy ball 3d game" (from IndigoZone CD) when it is at 1/4 the screen size. It is un playable when it is in full screen. and lets not talk about Quake2 performance because it is just depressing.
Re:Indy's? (Score:1)
Re:Indy's? (Score:1)
Do you know if the Voodoo3 works with these monitors? Does it sync on green?
Which Matrox cards work? all of em?
Used you can pick up a 20inch Sony monitor made for the Indigo2 for about $250 USD, compare this to say a $400 21Inch PC monitor..
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:1)
SGI has also sold off the vector part of Cray to Tera, hopefully that will be a better match than Cray-SGI was. And hopefully the new Cray company will create some more interesting hardware than the decidedly luke-warm SV1.
Re:The O2s are 32-bit *only*... (Score:1)
Later R10K O2's used a better chip, and I understand had superior performance. The reason why the R10K was put in the O2 was to have another platform for the chip to increase production and reduce the burdened cost for the Octanes and Origins.
Re:Taking advantage of the O2 (Score:1)
*Not a Sermon, Just a Thought
*/
IDF/IDL (Score:1)
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:1)
Re:Run Linux instead (Score:1)
Re:TLAs (Score:1)
And it's irrelevant what MCI stands for (I don't know anyway), as they don't even exist anymore. WorldCom is now MCI. In other words, MCI as a company doesn't exist, they're WorldCom. Try going to http://www.mci.com/ [mci.com] and see where you get forwarded to if you don't believe me.
Re:Run Linux instead - maybe not (Score:2)
Re:Run Linux instead - maybe not (Score:1)
see redhat's documentation on their Alpha port on the redhat's website or the linux/mips docs at www.linux.sgi.com
Doh!
That's O2, not 02 (Score:1)
Indigo 2? (Score:1)
Any ever get NetBSD running on an Indigo 2 R4400(??) 100Mhz proc? Any good, or just stick with the insecure but tasty eye candy that is IRIX?
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:1)
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
Re:NetBSD jingle (Score:1)
NetBSD's been plain 64bit on the alpha port since
it's first day, and will be so on other 64bit capable hardware as soon as working compilers
are available.
"O2" isn't a chip btw, but a machine's name. The SGI O2 uses some MIPS R5000 CPU.
- Hubert
Try IRIX 6.5 (Score:3)
IRIX 6.5 for it, then you get all the headers
you need to install gcc and in fact you even get
gcc precompiled for irix on the freeware cd.
Also, check ebay, people sometimes auction off complete IRIX cd sets for pretty cheap, you maybe be able to get a irix 6.5 set for $50 then you're sorted.
And yes irix 6.5 will run on any SGI with an R4000 or later cpu (except the R4000 Crimson or Indigo 1).
Re:Indy's? (Score:1)
As the proud owner of a 150mhz r4400, i'm happy...
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:2)
Nope. IRIX started from System V, thanks to (not that) Steve Bourne, who worked at SGI back in the old days. Story I heard is that he and someone else, probably Greg Chesson, walked into Jim's office one day and basically wouldn't leave until he agreed to use System V instead of BSD.
The interesting thing about IRIX is that it was one of the first SysV based kernels to incorporate a lot of BSD-isms, such as sockets and mbufs.
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:1)
Work on Indy? (Score:1)
I'd even be happy if I could use the monitor with a PC, but it looks like one of those fixed-freqency interfaces.
The O2s are 32-bit *only*... (Score:1)
The O2s with R10ks and R12ks are stuck as 32-bit machines because of the way the memory system was designed, according to a friend of mine who used to work for SGI as a field service critter. Apparently the O2 was originally designed for the R5k, and somebody in marketing decided it was a good idea to shoehorn the R10k in there... R10k O2s were sometimes slower than R5k O2s at the same clock!
I hadn't realized until I checked the SGI website today that an R12k-based O2 was ever made... I thought they'd been discontinued when the Intel-based VWs came out. The O2 kinda sucks as a 3D graphics machine, too; it was designed as a media editing workstation for audio and video, and the only hardware 3D support it has is Z-buffering...
Damn... (Score:2)
I keep hoping someone'll get a port to the Power series (which use, for example, the R3000 CPUs) going, but by the looks of this post [netbsd.org] to the NetBSD/sigmips mailing list, it ain't gonna happen...
Taking advantage of the O2 (Score:3)
Sgi does offer maintaince releases of irix for free on their site (several hundred megs, but at least they do offer it). Machines all the way back to R4k Indigo are still supported, so if you have the ram for Irix 6.5 you'll do well (at least 64MB, 96MB being much better on most hardware).
But mainly, sgi boxes are so fast because of their special hardware features! *Esp* boxes like the Indy and O2. The O2 R5k is a pretty slow box cpu-wise, but with crime graphics and ice it is **fast**. Take image manipulation for example: ont he main cpu you have probably pentium-similar performance. Recode your image manip tool to use OpenGL (and ice if you can) and you'll speed most everything up many times. ICE lets you resize, scale, re-color-code, color-space-convert, etc, etc all in *real time* on pretty large images. Its features like this that make sgi's so nice.
Now of course, netbsd once matured on sgimips may be more stable than irix (though they've done wonderfully with 6.5, my I2 easily goes hundreds of days before our house has a poweroutage, or it would go longer), and you have a current os as long as someone else (or yourself) is interested in keep the hardware current with the rest of the os. And then there's the ability to change your kernel and add your own changes, which you can't do with irix.
So...I'm happy (really happy) to see people taking interest in this port (and of course I'd love to see the Indigo^2 be supported too, right now I think linux boots on Indigo^2s (non-Impact?)), hopefully those who were so generous to work this far will also be interested in taking advantage of the machines, that'd be awesome to see!
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:1)
R5k you say? (Score:1)
cisco 12008/GRP (R5000) processor (revision 0x01) with 131072K bytes of memory.
R5000 CPU at 200Mhz, Implementation 35, Rev 2.1, 512KB L2 Cache
:)
Re:How quick? (Score:1)
Plus, the old R4k based machines just can't cut against more up to date x86 processors. I mean, come on, an R4000 (circa 1992?) against even a K6-2 (circa 1998?)
Re:May I suggest a potential customer? (Score:1)
Re:TLAs (Score:2)
Re:May I suggest a potential customer? (Score:1)
Lets just hope that GPLing it will make MySQL suck less soon.
How quick? (Score:1)
May I suggest a potential customer? (Score:3)
Given the recent reliability *cough* of Slashdot, here's hoping they give one of those O2 + NetBSD boxes a try. :)
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
yey! this O2 is finally usefull again! (Score:2)
i have a feeling netbsd will be a better development environment than irix, but i will miss the opengl.
To be added to Andy's TODO-list (Score:3)
I guess if Andy's aware of this good new, then we'll have some others arrows on the map.
--
Re:**** TROLL ALERT **** (Score:1)
May'be you do not need to be a troll, but you definitely want to. You want the respect and reputation that all the trolls of Slashdot have.
Of course you could not post anything near as intelligent and coherent like all the other trolls, so you started posting all this ASCII crap. When that failed, you started outing the trolls since you cannot be one yourself.
This of course has failed too, as the only thing you achieved was to get the trolls to move to another sid. This makes it a lot less fun for us because from time to time we all enjoy going to inchfan and having a look at what the trolls are up to.
And a hint: just because you're stupid and discovered the inchfan just now doesn't mean that it was hidden. All regular
To summarise: Get lost you fucking loser.
Re:How quick? (Score:2)
Re:Surprised it took them so long. (Score:2)
On a side note, SGI has been releasing Irix code under the GPL. However, this is all for show and to get cheap press. If they really wanted to play the open source game, they'd release their code under a BSD-friendly license as a sort of offering to their roots (so to speak;). Alas, business and the GPL fail us again.
SGI didn't help !! (Score:1)
SGI is dying and they deserve it. They don't care about Opensource, they are only interested in the linux userbase but they don't a clue on how to make money out of it.
Indy's? (Score:2)
Re:NetBSD jingle (Score:1)
Apart from the ones which use R10000 and R12000, which are both 64bit processors.
Re:Indigo 2? (Score:1)
I'd say that if they can get X going on your IndigoII then go with NetBSD, Irix is great for big SMP & Numa boxes but having all of that additional support can make it drag for single CPU boxes.
Re:The O2s are 32-bit *only*... (Score:3)
Since the R4000 came out mips cpus have been fully 64bit capable. How do you define if a machine is 64bit? If the bus size is 64bit? Ints are? Shorts? Longs? Pointers? It's hard to say "a machine" is 64bit.
Anyway, the O2 (using R5k) runs n32 (and older binaries), which are the same as n64 with only one exception: memory-addressing is 32bit rather than 64bit. The assumption is that since you have only 1gig of ram, needing to address more than 2gigs of memory isn't really a problem. It also means pointers and such use *half* the memory they would otherwise. The R4k Indigo2 is the same way, but if you use an R10k in it, you have 64bit pointers (I would have thought R10k and R12k O2s would do the same, but according to you they don't, oh well).
And the O2 does have some nice hardware, check out the docs to ICE on sgi's website sometime. The O2 was designed to do multiple streaming-videos on many objects, and to be an inexpensive sgi workstation. Thus, certain features have to be left out (if you need fast 3d, get an Indigo2 MaxImpact for less than the O2 costs, or an Octane if you need more memory bandwidth or faster cpus).
Hope that clears up any misconceptions!