cpu speed

Hi all,

Is there a way to see the cpu speed under neutrino ( I’m using momentics )?

Best Regards,

Alexander Popov ProSyst Bulgaria Inc.
Team Leader 48 Vladajska Str.
Dept: Real Time OS and Java VM Sofia 1606, Bulgaria
Phone: +359 2 952 35 81/203 http://www.prosyst.com
Mobile: +359 87 663 193 OSGi Technology Leaders

‘pidin info’ will show the cpu speed, total and available memory, etc…

Regards,

Joe

“Alexander Popov” <s_popov@prosyst.bg> wrote in message
news:20030515172336.11515910.s_popov@prosyst.bg

Hi all,

Is there a way to see the cpu speed under neutrino ( I’m using
momentics )?

Best Regards,

Alexander Popov ProSyst Bulgaria Inc.
Team Leader 48 Vladajska Str.
Dept: Real Time OS and Java VM Sofia 1606, Bulgaria
Phone: +359 2 952 35 81/203 > http://www.prosyst.com
Mobile: +359 87 663 193 OSGi Technology Leaders

Actually, this shows the system clock speed.
Is there a way to see the effective system speed?
(i.e. more like QNX4)

Hardware Support <hw@qnx.com> wrote:
HS > ‘pidin info’ will show the cpu speed, total and available memory, etc…

HS > Regards,
HS > Joe

HS > “Alexander Popov” <s_popov@prosyst.bg> wrote in message
HS > news:20030515172336.11515910.s_popov@prosyst.bg

Hi all,

Is there a way to see the cpu speed under neutrino ( I’m using
HS > momentics )?

Adam Mallory <amallory@qnx.com> wrote:

Bill Caroselli <> qtps@earthlink.net> > wrote in message
news:ba0m5q$rli$> 1@inn.qnx.com> …
Actually, this shows the system clock speed.
Is there a way to see the effective system speed?
(i.e. more like QNX4)

Huh? You want an arbitrary benchmark(QNX4) rather than the clock speed?
How will that be meaningful over different platforms (not that clock speed
is all that meaningful either).

At least with clock speed you can look at the type of processor and make
some kind of intelligent decision. The QNX4 way, apart from being totally
unaware of Moore’s Law :slight_smile: still gave you an “idea” because they were all
x86 processors anyway. Certainly not as useful on multiplatform…

Cheers,
-RK


[If replying via email, you’ll need to click on the URL that’s emailed to you
afterwards to forward the email to me – spam filters and all that]
Robert Krten, PDP minicomputer collector http://www.parse.com/~pdp8/

Bill Caroselli <qtps@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:ba0m5q$rli$1@inn.qnx.com

Actually, this shows the system clock speed.
Is there a way to see the effective system speed?
(i.e. more like QNX4)

Huh? You want an arbitrary benchmark(QNX4) rather than the clock speed?
How will that be meaningful over different platforms (not that clock speed
is all that meaningful either).

-Adam

Robert Krten <rk@parse.com> wrote:
RK > Adam Mallory <amallory@qnx.com> wrote:

Bill Caroselli <> qtps@earthlink.net> > wrote in message
news:ba0m5q$rli$> 1@inn.qnx.com> …
Actually, this shows the system clock speed.
Is there a way to see the effective system speed?
(i.e. more like QNX4)

Huh? You want an arbitrary benchmark(QNX4) rather than the clock speed?
How will that be meaningful over different platforms (not that clock speed
is all that meaningful either).

LOL OK, I get it. I am still not using QNX on multiple platforms. So
that isn’t an issue for me. There are other more subtle performance
issues that are of interest to me. But then again, there are always
better, more specific benchmarks available for those things anyway.


RK > At least with clock speed you can look at the type of processor and make
RK > some kind of intelligent decision. The QNX4 way, apart from being totally
RK > unaware of Moore’s Law :slight_smile: still gave you an “idea” because they were all
RK > x86 processors anyway. Certainly not as useful on multiplatform…