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I see that now you suspect that IBM is putting a horde of governors all over the place. This is not the case. If your program uses little memory - it is not memory constrained - so adding more memory will not change anything for it. But if it requires lots of memory, and real memory is not big enough, and parts of a program or data get paged in and out - then your application is memory constrained. Adding more memory will reduce or eliminate paging overhead and make your program run faster. Same logic applies to disk constrained - 100 disk drives can perform more disk accesses per second than 10 disk drives. So if your application needs 1000000 disk accesses to complete, then on a 100 drive system it will finish faster than on 10 drive system. That simple. And no need for governors... Best regards Alexei Pytel System Performance III Dept XQK/006-2 Rochester, MN (507) 253- 2867 or T/L 553-2867 Internet: pytel@us.ibm.com VM mail: IBMUSM07(PYTEL) "If you have a fountain, turn it off. Fountain also needs a rest!" Classical Russian aphorism. "Nathan M. Andelin" <nathanma@haaga.com To: <MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com> > cc: Sent by: Subject: Re: How are CPU Speed and Overall CPW owner-midrange-l@mi Related? drange.com 04/30/2001 12:33 PM Please respond to MIDRANGE-L Just thought of another related question. The V4R4 Performance Planning Guide characterizes the machine's maximum CPW rating as a figure that might be constrained by memory and disk. This may sound like a dumb question, but consider it in light of the fact that a 100 Mhz machine runs a CPU bound program faster than a 200 Mhz machine, as delineated in my previous post. If I upgraded my machine from 320 MB Ram to the maximum 832 MB, would an individual program run faster, even though the program used little memory? Is there a governor on the CPU that might be adjusted by the addition of memory? Sorry if this sounds rediculous. Thanks, Nathan. +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +--- +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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