- Aug 25, 2001
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More comments from the same guy that claimed Shangai was going to have a 4Ghz commercial SKU. (Prior thread )
From this thread
From a PM he wrote to me:
Where to start... first of all, this is the supposed "correction" post by whiteboi:
Yeah, highly technical at that. The fact that he claims whiteboi even agreed with him, or corrected me, with that post, suggests that he is delusional and detached from reality, as that post contained nothing technical, and nothing to suggest that I was incorrect.
Second, is this even remotely true - that AMD would spend R&D money on a chip respin, just to work around a software bug in VMWare under Windows? That seems just inconcievable to me.
Perhaps the Unix code paths never exercise that particular bug, but the Windows code does. That's my theory. I just have a hard time believing that these ivory-tower types deny the AMD TLB bug exists. It's like denying the holocost. Well, sort of.
Would AMD endure a chip re-spin just to be able to wash away the bad publicity from the bug?
From this thread
From a PM he wrote to me:
I see that you have been corrected by the retired senior tchenical advisor of IBM (whiteboi) and now another has seen to say BS. If you had read Mike's paper you would have known that Mike talked about Intel's version of this problem in IA32. He projected it for the MS coded Virtualization software under AMD-V since none of the MS codes other than MS's proprietary code enable dynamic rather than binary implementation under the Popek/Goldberg Principles. Gerry Popek criticized VMware for as he said "screwing up the process" .
AMD-V was originally developed as part of DARPA's HEC. The spec design calls for the extensions to be 100% compatible with UNICOS/SUSE Linuxbased on the following:
NSA, DOE/SC (SNL and ORNL): Continue cooperative development of Black Widow and Red Storm
systems, leading to introduction in 2006 of a new generation of these systems. So the Phenom went into the Black Widow and the virtualization ran straight out of the box with no issues for SUSE and Debian based Linux. By definition then if it ran to spec under the DARPA standards it had no flaw. The flaw was a bunch of questionable software code written by others not following the IEEE spec. There is a hiccup on Red Hat due to the rpm structure.
There is also a discussion of the problems here U of ILL C/A I trust that you will be competent enough to find it. And you might try Dr Katherine Yelick's follow up to this paper. If like Jackone are fool enough to doubt her credentials Bio
Remember this:
" The National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center and DARPA have both done projects that demonstrate that the TLB issue is a VMware/Windows problem only (if were truly the cpu it would affect Linux and Unix as well).
You're on drugs. The VM bug is a genuine CPU errata. Why else do you think that AMD made a fix? The fact is that Linux and Unix implemented workarounds, not that there is no bug. "
Now tell me if you are a Summa Cum Laude Phi Beta Kappa graduate of MIT or Dumb Kid with an overinflated ego too high of an opinion of himself.
The other thing is you must be in High School because every one in freshman English learns to support their writing by appropriate references and citations. I didn't see a single source anywhere in your postings.
By the way I am the retired Project Director for Red Storm at Sandia National Labs and was there for the development of AMD-V. I have had my regular drug test along with every federal employee for the last 20 years. What about you?
Where to start... first of all, this is the supposed "correction" post by whiteboi:
=WhiteBoiAccording to an authority in FL, he is a MUSLIN.=nsdp.. is really no more valid than people who claim Obama is Muslim.
Yeah, highly technical at that. The fact that he claims whiteboi even agreed with him, or corrected me, with that post, suggests that he is delusional and detached from reality, as that post contained nothing technical, and nothing to suggest that I was incorrect.
Second, is this even remotely true - that AMD would spend R&D money on a chip respin, just to work around a software bug in VMWare under Windows? That seems just inconcievable to me.
Perhaps the Unix code paths never exercise that particular bug, but the Windows code does. That's my theory. I just have a hard time believing that these ivory-tower types deny the AMD TLB bug exists. It's like denying the holocost. Well, sort of.
Would AMD endure a chip re-spin just to be able to wash away the bad publicity from the bug?
