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Forum Discussion
gpwolfe
Nov 30, 2010Aspirant
Boo-Yah! 8GB (2x4GB) works in pro.
Greetings,
I just wanted to say that the pro (rndp6000) works w/4GB DIMMs.
Specifically, at least, these:
DDR2 8GB (2x4GB) PC6400 800MHz PATRIOT PSD28G800K
Frontview shows:
Firmware: RAIDiator 4.2.15
Memory: 8064 MB [6-6-6-18 DDR2]
I booted the thing just to see if it'd recognize any of it and grab some logs. Now it's running the memory test. I'll let that go overnight.
I was reticent to try it as no one else on here seemed to think it would work. I looked up the stats on the Q963 controller and ran a few information gathering tools like:
And after seeing this:
I figured since it claims to support 4GB modules it was worth a shot.
Here's the 'meat' from decode-dimms with the new memory installed.
Here's
Not certain what else anyone might want for added 'warm and fuzziness' to take the plunge.
On another note, the corsair XMS2 twin2x4096-6400c5c did not work for me contrary to many other posts claiming they do. I will qualify that a bit further by stating that I could not get either DIMM to boot in the first socket. The one closest to the cpu. If I put one in the other socket and nothing in the one closest to the cpu it booted fine. If I left the 1GB stock in its shipped socket (closest to the cpu) and put one of the corsair modules in other socket it would boot and show ~3GB - 128MB (shared video ram reservation?).
In any case I robbed some memory out of my son's machine. A pair of supertalent T8UB2GC5 modules also DDR2-800 PC6400. They show up as [4-5-5-15 DDR2] in frontview.
I hope that's helpful.
Thanks,
--Gary
I just wanted to say that the pro (rndp6000) works w/4GB DIMMs.
Specifically, at least, these:
DDR2 8GB (2x4GB) PC6400 800MHz PATRIOT PSD28G800K
Frontview shows:
Firmware: RAIDiator 4.2.15
Memory: 8064 MB [6-6-6-18 DDR2]
I booted the thing just to see if it'd recognize any of it and grab some logs. Now it's running the memory test. I'll let that go overnight.
I was reticent to try it as no one else on here seemed to think it would work. I looked up the stats on the Q963 controller and ran a few information gathering tools like:
dmidecode
hwinfo
decode-dimms (After building and inserting the eeprom module)
lshw
And after seeing this:
Memory Controller Information
Error Detecting Method: 64-bit ECC
Error Correcting Capabilities:
None
Supported Interleave: One-way Interleave
Current Interleave: One-way Interleave
Maximum Memory Module Size: 4096 MB
Maximum Total Memory Size: 16384 MB
Supported Speeds:
Other
Supported Memory Types:
DIMM
SDRAM
Memory Module Voltage: 3.3 V
Associated Memory Slots: 4
0x0009
0x000A
0x000B
0x000C
Enabled Error Correcting Capabilities:
None
I figured since it claims to support 4GB modules it was worth a shot.
Here's the 'meat' from decode-dimms with the new memory installed.
Decoding EEPROM: /sys/bus/i2c/drivers/eeprom/0-0050
Guessing DIMM is in bank 1
---=== SPD EEPROM Information ===---
EEPROM Checksum of bytes 0-62 OK (0x34)
# of bytes written to SDRAM EEPROM 128
Total number of bytes in EEPROM 256
Fundamental Memory type DDR2 SDRAM
SPD Revision 1.2
---=== Memory Characteristics ===---
Maximum module speed 1600MHz (PC12800)
Size 4096 MB
tCL-tRCD-tRP-tRAS 6-6-6-18
Supported CAS Latencies 6, 5, 4
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 6) 2.5 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 6) 0.4 ns
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 5) 3 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 5) 0.45 ns
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 4) 3.75 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 4) 0.5 ns
---=== Manufacturing Information ===---
Manufacturer Patriot Memory
Manufacturing Location Code 0x02
Part Number PSD24G8002
Manufacturing Date 2010-W38
Assembly Serial Number 0xB2151B28
Decoding EEPROM: /sys/bus/i2c/drivers/eeprom/0-0052
Guessing DIMM is in bank 3
---=== SPD EEPROM Information ===---
EEPROM Checksum of bytes 0-62 OK (0x34)
# of bytes written to SDRAM EEPROM 128
Total number of bytes in EEPROM 256
Fundamental Memory type DDR2 SDRAM
SPD Revision 1.2
---=== Memory Characteristics ===---
Maximum module speed 1600MHz (PC12800)
Size 4096 MB
tCL-tRCD-tRP-tRAS 6-6-6-18
Supported CAS Latencies 6, 5, 4
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 6) 2.5 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 6) 0.4 ns
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 5) 3 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 5) 0.45 ns
Minimum Cycle Time (CAS 4) 3.75 ns
Maximum Access Time (CAS 4) 0.5 ns
---=== Manufacturing Information ===---
Manufacturer Patriot Memory
Manufacturing Location Code 0x02
Part Number PSD24G8002
Manufacturing Date 2010-W38
Assembly Serial Number 0xC9131B28
Here's
hwinfo --memoryoutput:
01: None 00.0: 10102 Main Memory
[Created at memory.61]
Unique ID: rdCR.CxwsZFjVASF
Hardware Class: memory
Model: "Main Memory"
Memory Range: 0x00000000-0x1f3791fff (rw)
Memory Size: 8 GB
Config Status: cfg=new, avail=yes, need=no, active=unknown
Not certain what else anyone might want for added 'warm and fuzziness' to take the plunge.
On another note, the corsair XMS2 twin2x4096-6400c5c did not work for me contrary to many other posts claiming they do. I will qualify that a bit further by stating that I could not get either DIMM to boot in the first socket. The one closest to the cpu. If I put one in the other socket and nothing in the one closest to the cpu it booted fine. If I left the 1GB stock in its shipped socket (closest to the cpu) and put one of the corsair modules in other socket it would boot and show ~3GB - 128MB (shared video ram reservation?).
In any case I robbed some memory out of my son's machine. A pair of supertalent T8UB2GC5 modules also DDR2-800 PC6400. They show up as [4-5-5-15 DDR2] in frontview.
I hope that's helpful.
Thanks,
--Gary
60 Replies
Replies have been turned off for this discussion
- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee Retired
gpwolfe wrote:
That's what an E6600 or E6700 Core 2 Duo is for. Those are the latest and greatest that will work in the pro that have VT-x support...on top of being less anemic than the E2160 anyway.
--Gary
Yes, but unlike a memory swap, replacing the CPU permanently voids your warranty. If you upgrade the memory and run into problems you can swap the stock memory back in and factory default if necessary and you should be O.K. (apart from loss of data) provided swapping the memory doesn't damage the memory slots and the memory doesn't damage other parts of the chassis.
8GB is a nice upgrade, but it's well and truly overkill for most users.TeknoJnky wrote: I have a q6600 I'm likely to upgrade soon, I wonder if that would work.
I don't think so. See the post after http://readynas.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=29284&p=164636#p164636
If you must upgrade the CPU and thus don't care about voiding your warranty then stick to one of the CPUs that is known to work.
There are two versions of the CPU used in the new Pro 6. One of them supports VT-x. If you get a Pro 6 and it has a CPU supporting VT-x that would be a better option imo. If you can put 8GB RAM in a Pro you should be able to do the same in a Pro 6. mdgm wrote: There are two versions of the CPU used in the new Pro 6. One of them supports VT-x. If you get a Pro 6 and it has a CPU supporting VT-x that would be a better option imo. If you can put 8GB RAM in a Pro you should be able to do the same in a Pro 6.
I can confirm that the E5300 CPU in my Pro-6 beta unit does support VT-x...processor : 0
vendor_id : GenuineIntel
cpu family : 6
model : 23
model name : Pentium(R) Dual-Core CPU E5300 @ 2.60GHz
stepping : 10
cpu MHz : 2593.861
cache size : 2048 KB
physical id : 0
siblings : 2
core id : 0
cpu cores : 2
apicid : 0
initial apicid : 0
fpu : yes
fpu_exception : yes
cpuid level : 13
wp : yes
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall nx lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good aperfmperf pni dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr pdcm xsave lahf_lm tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority
bogomips : 5187.72
clflush size : 64
cache_alignment : 64
address sizes : 36 bits physical, 48 bits virtual
power management:
processor : 1
vendor_id : GenuineIntel
cpu family : 6
model : 23
model name : Pentium(R) Dual-Core CPU E5300 @ 2.60GHz
stepping : 10
cpu MHz : 2593.861
cache size : 2048 KB
physical id : 0
siblings : 2
core id : 1
cpu cores : 2
apicid : 1
initial apicid : 1
fpu : yes
fpu_exception : yes
cpuid level : 13
wp : yes
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall nx lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good aperfmperf pni dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr pdcm xsave lahf_lm tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority
bogomips : 5186.72
clflush size : 64
cache_alignment : 64
address sizes : 36 bits physical, 48 bits virtual
power management:- sdouekGuide
gpwolfe wrote: TeknoJnky wrote: the missing 128m could be a bios and/or video rom 'shadowing'. Obviously there is no video out on the readynas's, but that does not mean there isn't video card/framebuffer hardware there.
btw, glad to hear 8gb works, I'd love to have that in my pro along with some vbox VM's
There is true and real video hardware on the board. There's a VGA header and everything. There's just not a DB15 on the back anywhere. That's why I mentioned digging up a cable somewhere.
However, mrwizardno2 has, in fact, connected a head to his via that same header. Go here: viewtopic.php?f=64&t=40162&start=0&hilit=ReadyNAS+Pro+RNDP6350+Possible+Flash+Disk+Boot+Failure
I'm fairly confident that the memory is the video reservation. If you look at the dmesg output you can see the BIOS reservations. It's really the only thing that makes sense for such a large BIOS reservation. Most boards that have such a feature also grant the ability to set the amount of memory reserved for this purpose. Therefore it could well be that all one has to do is hook up a head and keyboard and lower it.
Or, if one knows the layout, an easier way may well be to load up the nvram module and 'massage' that data appropriately there.
--Gary
But does not explain why it only subtracts the 128 mb when the second memory chip is inserted. Like I said I put in the first it registers 2048mb not 1920mb whem I put in the second chip it register 3968mb and not 4096mb.
If there was something there using 128mb wouldn't it be missing whether or not I used one or two memory slots. It has to do with something because once you go over 2048mb it happens. I currently have 2 1024mb chips in place and it registers the full amount of 2048mb. - gpwolfeAspirant
sdouek wrote: gpwolfe wrote: TeknoJnky wrote: the missing 128m could be a bios and/or video rom 'shadowing'. Obviously there is no video out on the readynas's, but that does not mean there isn't video card/framebuffer hardware there.
btw, glad to hear 8gb works, I'd love to have that in my pro along with some vbox VM's
There is true and real video hardware on the board. There's a VGA header and everything. There's just not a DB15 on the back anywhere. That's why I mentioned digging up a cable somewhere.
However, mrwizardno2 has, in fact, connected a head to his via that same header. Go here: viewtopic.php?f=64&t=40162&start=0&hilit=ReadyNAS+Pro+RNDP6350+Possible+Flash+Disk+Boot+Failure
I'm fairly confident that the memory is the video reservation. If you look at the dmesg output you can see the BIOS reservations. It's really the only thing that makes sense for such a large BIOS reservation. Most boards that have such a feature also grant the ability to set the amount of memory reserved for this purpose. Therefore it could well be that all one has to do is hook up a head and keyboard and lower it.
Or, if one knows the layout, an easier way may well be to load up the nvram module and 'massage' that data appropriately there.
--Gary
But does not explain why it only subtracts the 128 mb when the second memory chip is inserted. Like I said I put in the first it registers 2048mb not 1920mb whem I put in the second chip it register 3968mb and not 4096mb.
If there was something there using 128mb wouldn't it be missing whether or not I used one or two memory slots. It has to do with something because once you go over 2048mb it happens. I currently have 2 1024mb chips in place and it registers the full amount of 2048mb.
Indeed, that's what I got w/the 2 2GB modules I had before attempting to use the 4GB modules. I did not know it only happened for values > 2GB of RAM. And I am at a loss to explain why that is currently.
--Gary - Following Gary's lead, I bought (2) 4GB sticks today also and so far so good. They didn't have the PATRIOT PSD28G800K in stock so I opted for (2) PATRIOT PSD24G8002.
I booted up to see what Frontview listed...
It has now successfully run three memory test passes and I will probably let it go on through the night but so far all seems OK also. - sdouekGuideSo hopefully when you run a file check and disk scrubbing next week everything will be fine. Odd that 2x2 gb chips don't get the full memory but 2x4gb does.
I wonder if a jedi can chime in about this.
EDIT: you don't get the full 8 GB. - mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee Retiredsdouek 8GB = 8192MB = 8064MB + 128MB
Remember 1GB = 1024 MB = 2^10 MB - sdouekGuideDam just got excited that it worked - that will teach me to read the whole post and not just glance at it.
- Update: Passed 7 memory test passes when I manually stopped it.
- re: the lost 128meg
the reason it does not go missing @ 2gig, is because the shadowing takes place at the upper end of the memory range.
if you recall, 32bit windows allocates the first 2 gig for applications and the 2nd 2gig for system, including video ram, bios, etc.
64 bit relocates the address far into the 64bit memory map, but the video/bios still takes a small chunk of the upper 4g before its logically remapped into 64 bit.
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