From: Noel Chiappa
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2016 11:51 AM
> From: Rich Alderson
> Data was transferred via FTP over a 100baseT
crossover cable connected
> to a Slackware server; the Rabbit was able to keep up with 4 drives at
> this speed
Were the bits actually stored on the Slackware server,
or was it just used
to put bits on the 'drive' to start with? If the latter, what were the
actual bits stored on? (I know, not that relevant, since this is the prior
rev, but I'm curious.)
Stored on a big honking JBOD array (set up as RAID 5 in Linux), since an
RP06 stored as described is nigh on 900MB, and served up on that FTP link
from Slackware.
> a Mesa 5i22 Anything I/O card (includes a Xilinx
Spartan-III FPGA) that
> plugs directly into the PCI bus in a server-class X86-64 box, and used
> a revision of a separate driver/receiver card designed for MDE 1.0 to
> connect to the Massbus
Let me make sure I understand this; was there some
sort of cable or
somehow a connection from the Mesa 5i22 directly to the driver/receiver
card, which was purely 'level conversion', with the Mesa doing the
'protocol' on the MASSBUS? (I.e. they didn't communicate over the PCI
bus?)
Yes, the d/r card is strictly level conversion, and the microcode in the
Xilinx does all the Massbus protocol.
> a control program for the PC side which runs under
Windows 2008/2012
> Server.
So the actual bits are stored on something (disk?)
controlled by the PC?
Again using RAID 5 arrays on the PC servers, but PCI makes it a lot faster
than Ethernet.
Rich
Rich Alderson
Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
Living Computer Museum
2245 1st Avenue S
Seattle, WA 98134
mailto:RichA at
LivingComputerMuseum.org
http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/