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    New Alix board for 2013

    Hardware
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      Well exactly. My meter was ~£30 and seems to work OK. It measures Watts and VA so I guess it allows for powerfactor but it's clearly not true RMS so I doubt it reads 'spiky' waveforms too well. I still use it though because it gives me a good idea of what's drawing power and if I reduce that. Just keep in mind that real power meters that have 0.01% accuracy are, as you say, many thousands of £/$.

      Anyway 6W is low enough for me.  :)

      Steve

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      • W
        watercooled
        last edited by

        OK here are some DC measurements from my 2D13 for comparison.

        Voltage set at 12.0V
        Idle: 0.28A 3.36W
        ~60Mb/s download (speedtest): 0.34A 4.08W
        Max CPU, achieved with

        dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/null
        

        or burnMMX: fluctuating between 0.37 and 0.39A 4.44-4.68W

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        • stephenw10S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by

          Nice.  :)
          I'm certainly prepared to believe those measurements, assuming the psu holds 12V well enough.  ;)

          How many Watts do you think are lost in the PSU, it's efficiency?
          Given the small variation in power, 5W max, perhaps the supplied psu is still highly efficient at 3.36W.
          Pure speculation time: I would expect to see perhaps 0.25-0.5W loss in the PSU in which case I would hope an AC side power meter should read 4W (if it doesn't display fractions of a Watt).

          User phil.davis could tell us a lot about the power consumption of the old Alix board since a lot of his sites are solar powered.

          Steve

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          • W
            watercooled
            last edited by

            Yeah I was using a bench power supply and double-checked voltage and current with a couple of multimeters.

            The PSU I normally use, and did the AC measurements with, is a 60W FSP one which I also use to supply some other network kit (I've also measured with some 12W PSUs with the same results IIRC). It's efficiency level V so >87% average efficiency, although the points for that average are measured at 25, 50, 75 and 100 percent load, so it may not be that efficient at <10% load.

            Either way, you're likely correct the AC meter should be displaying 4W. The resolution isn't ideal for measuring this low TBF, but it's ballpark accurate at least. Even being less than half a Watt out and clipping the decimals rather than rounding up could explain why it displays 3.

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            • nesenseN
              nesense
              last edited by

              I ran iperf again, this time using two computers connected to the board on individual port, all running 1000baseT, iperf server on a windows 8.1 box, and client on macbook laptop running os x 10.7.5, only running squid on pfsense 2.1, here are the results:

              –----------------------------------------------------------
              Server listening on TCP port 5001
              TCP window size: 64.0 KByte (default)

              [  4] local 192.168.10.11 port 5001 connected with 192.168.20.11 port 49272
              [  4]  0.0-10.0 sec  539 MBytes  452 Mbits/sec

              Using netio:

              NETIO - Network Throughput Benchmark, Version 1.32
              (C) 1997-2012 Kai Uwe Rommel

              UDP server listening.
              TCP server listening.
              UDP connection established …
              Receiving from client, packet size  1k ...  21.98 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  1k ...  184.75 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  2k ...  4.16 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  2k ...  263.60 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  4k ...  0 Byte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  4k ...  428.63 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  8k ...  403.75 KByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  8k ...  567.76 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size 16k ...  203.54 KByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size 16k ...  746.44 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size 32k ...  0 Byte/s
              Sending to client, packet size 32k ...  913.70 MByte/s
              Done.

              TCP connection established …
              Receiving from client, packet size  1k ...  28.91 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  1k ...  30.98 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  2k ...  23.72 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  2k ...  23.23 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  4k ...  33.43 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  4k ...  43.70 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size  8k ...  23.25 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size  8k ...  46.61 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size 16k ...  31.16 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size 16k ...  47.44 MByte/s
              Receiving from client, packet size 32k ...  14.18 MByte/s
              Sending to client, packet size 32k ...  47.83 MByte/s
              Done.

              Looks like I need something other than the crappy Macbook to test with  :-\

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                Nice!  :)
                If you run 'top -SH' on the apu board what does the cpu usage look like during that test?

                Not sure how netio is measuring that udp speed but most of those numbers are far higher than you could get down a gigabit connection so it looks like it's buffering somewhere.

                Steve

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                • W
                  watercooled
                  last edited by

                  It's the UDP transmit speed, but of course most of that won't make it on to the wire, so it's essentially irrelevant. The receive speeds are what you'd want to look at, but it seems something is up with the testing as they're zero, or close to it, on most of the runs.

                  Edit: I've just tried the UDP benchmark myself and it never reported above roughly 113MB/s, so it seems it works a bit differently than I thought, and something's up with the above benchmark.

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                  • C
                    Criggie
                    last edited by

                    FYI I've just finished doing iperf testing on an older alix 2d2.
                    Sadly I did not take power usage measurements while testing.

                    Full results at: http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,70911.0.html

                    Short version, okay for up to 50 Mbit, can do up to 95 Mbit but you're wringing the nuts off there.

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                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10:

                      How are you testing that? A throughput test is what's needed, iperf running on two separate machine not on the pfSense box.
                      326Mbps seems disappointingly slow.  :-\

                      Steve

                      We ran a throughput test on a very similar box (same cpu, same NICs), and were disappointed.

                      Our APU only recently arrived.

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                      • A
                        Applied
                        last edited by

                        First impressions (running IPFire):

                        http://www.tuxone.ch/2013/12/alix-nachfolger-im-test.html

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                        • X
                          xbipin
                          last edited by

                          i heard this new alix apu gets pretty hot, almost 81.5 degrees

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • stephenw10S
                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                            last edited by

                            Since it relies on the enclosure for cooling, what case was that in?

                            Steve

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                            • X
                              xbipin
                              last edited by

                              in the default case it heats up that much, atleast thats what the developer told me himself and that it might be fixed in the next redesign so consider that temperature it would make it useless in hot countries like mine where the summer goes upto 50 degrees

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                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                Hmm, seems very close to the 90 degrees maximum rating.

                                Steve

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • W
                                  watercooled
                                  last edited by

                                  That seems really high for a heatsinked low-TDP processor like this. How is it transferring heat to the case exactly, e.g. a really thick thermal pad?

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                                  • T
                                    totoro77
                                    last edited by

                                    @xbipin:

                                    in the default case it heats up that much, atleast thats what the developer told me himself and that it might be fixed in the next redesign so consider that temperature it would make it useless in hot countries like mine where the summer goes upto 50 degrees

                                    You can find below a new enclosure designed for PC Engines APU by Calexium.
                                    The thermal dissipation is better than closed small cases from PC Engines. There is also HDD fixation for up to 2 HDD.
                                    http://store.calexium.com/en/boitiers/324-pc-engines-alix-2d3-2d13-or-openvox-ipc100-110-120-case-with-hdd-wifi-black.html

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                                    • X
                                      xbipin
                                      last edited by

                                      the other thing is that the processor is on the bottom so most of the heat is towards a wall or the ground based on where its placed so in countries like mine thats another issue as the summer temps here r 50 degrees so the ground is much warmer than the rest of the house. it would be better if there was a fan, even low speed would be better than nothing and the processor on top rather than bottom

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        I'm sure that extensive testing has been done by pc-engines during development. I don't believe for a second that they didn't think about keeping the CPU cool enough. Have we actually seen any heat related failure? Shutdowns? Reduced speed?
                                        That's using cases that are just sheet aluminium. If even a small amount of finning were added I'm sure it could run cooler for use in a high temperature environment.
                                        Aluminium is amazingly good at conducting heat so the fact that the CPU is in contact with the bottom may not make all that much difference.

                                        Steve

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                                        • W
                                          watercooled
                                          last edited by

                                          Those temps just seem off to me - were the die directly contacting the aluminium case I wouldn't expect it to get nearly that hot. Does anyone know how the production platform is mounted? Those temps suggest the die could be floating i.e. only conduction through PCB, or a thick thermal pad which don't have great conductivity.

                                          The new board uses barely more power than the 2D13, and that barely gets lukewarm to the touch; my GigE switch gets warmer. Even the Geode CPU itself without heatsinking only gets warm to the touch, although we're talking about different packages of course.

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                                          • A
                                            Applied
                                            last edited by

                                            @watercooled:

                                            That seems really high for a heatsinked low-TDP processor like this. How is it transferring heat to the case exactly, e.g. a really thick thermal pad?

                                            PC Engines web site states "using a 3 mm alu heat spreader". Without having seen pre-production units, I understand this as using the 3mm spreader to bridge the gap between the CPU die and the enclosure. This seems supported by the visible thermal grease residue on CPU and south bridge die in the pictures.

                                            These high temperatures do not at all seem implausible, let alone surprising, to me. As a reference point, I am aware of this test. Featuring the AMD G-T40E (which is the lower-TDP version of the two which were considered for the the PC Engines APU), the Jetway test unit approached 80° C under CPU load. And this in, at least judging from a quick glance, an enclosure that seems to have been specifically designed for thermal dissipation (unlike the Alix enclosures). In contrast, the cooling solution from PC Engines looks like an attempt to shoehorn the new APU thermals into cases that were not designed for passive conductive cooling to begin with.

                                            That's not to say they can't do it successfully and won't be able to deliver a solid & stable (in the long term) solution - but employing the T-40_N_ in a fanless build using the existing Alix enclosures always seemed quite a stretch to me.

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