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PCI Express 7.0 v0.3 Specification Shared With PCI-SIG Members

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  • PCI Express 7.0 v0.3 Specification Shared With PCI-SIG Members

    Phoronix: PCI Express 7.0 v0.3 Specification Shared With PCI-SIG Members

    Ahead of the planned full specification release in 2025, the PCI-SIG has now shared with its members the first review draft "v0.3" of PCI Express 7.0...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    Lovely, however, there is still no need for PCIe 5.0 let alone 7.0 as even the best GPUs run on version 4.0 and anything more just doesn't seem to benefit the consumer at this point and isn't likely to for many years.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by rob-tech View Post
      Lovely, however, there is still no need for PCIe 5.0 let alone 7.0 as even the best GPUs run on version 4.0 and anything more just doesn't seem to benefit the consumer at this point and isn't likely to for many years.
      This is not for the consumer. This is to support emerging server I/O standards that require more bandwidth than is currently available. 400 GBE, 800 GBE, etc. I'd be surprised if you see PCIe 7.0 at the consumer level in a decade from now even.

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      • #4
        Exactly my thoughts. This is for those cases where there 1,934,302 CPU, GFX and AI cores feeding 4^34 TB RAM in a cube metre of datacentre space.

        I'm still happily plonking along on PCIe 2 levels, despite 3/4 support.
        Hi

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        • #5
          Originally posted by torsionbar28 View Post
          This is not for the consumer. This is to support emerging server I/O standards that require more bandwidth than is currently available. 400 GBE, 800 GBE, etc. I'd be surprised if you see PCIe 7.0 at the consumer level in a decade from now even.
          Well, the boot process isn't too fast these days. A faster disk would help a lot. This is with 5000 series Ryzen & PCIe 4.0 SSD:
          Code:
          $ systemd-analyze
          
          Startup finished in 17.382s (firmware) + 528ms (loader) + 3.810s (kernel) + 10.344s (userspace) = 32.066s
          graphical.target reached after 7.505s in userspace.
          
          $ ​systemd-analyze blame
          27.478s fstrim.service
          5.894s systemd-swap.service
          ...
          ​

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          • #6
            Originally posted by rob-tech View Post
            Lovely, however, there is still no need for PCIe 5.0 let alone 7.0
            Sure there is: CPU-to-Chipset connections. The chipsets are usually hubs for other interfaces that get faster with every iteration (usb, thunderbolt, ...). Faster with less PCIe lanes is always good.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by caligula View Post

              Well, the boot process isn't too fast these days. A faster disk would help a lot. This is with 5000 series Ryzen & PCIe 4.0 SSD:
              Code:
              $ systemd-analyze
              
              Startup finished in 17.382s (firmware) + 528ms (loader) + 3.810s (kernel) + 10.344s (userspace) = 32.066s
              graphical.target reached after 7.505s in userspace.
              
              $ ​systemd-analyze blame
              27.478s fstrim.service
              5.894s systemd-swap.service
              ...
              ​
              On which distro?

              On Lubuntu 22.04 LTS with an Intel i3-7100U (fully mitigated) + cheapest 256 GB PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD from 2019:

              Startup finished in 7.522s (firmware) + 4.515s (loader) + 5.474s (kernel) + 9.074s (userspace) = 26.586s
              graphical.target reached after 9.062s in userspace​

              6.701s NetworkManager-wait-online.service
              1.988s snapd.service
              1.828s vboxdrv.service
              908ms dev-nvme0n1p2.device​
              Your boot process should be alot faster than mine...

              Comment


              • #8
                Oooh, looks like fun!

                Startup finished in 8.415s (firmware) + 5.681s (loader) + 2.351s (kernel) + 15.132s (userspace) = 31.581s
                graphical.target reached after 4.109s in userspace.



                ManjaroKDE, current as of 16/06/23 (6.4rc2 kernel), 8 GB RAM, AMD A4-9125 RADEON R3
                Hi

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by caligula View Post

                  Well, the boot process isn't too fast these days. A faster disk would help a lot. This is with 5000 series Ryzen & PCIe 4.0 SSD:
                  Code:
                  $ systemd-analyze
                  
                  Startup finished in 17.382s (firmware) + 528ms (loader) + 3.810s (kernel) + 10.344s (userspace) = 32.066s
                  graphical.target reached after 7.505s in userspace.
                  
                  $ ​systemd-analyze blame
                  27.478s fstrim.service
                  5.894s systemd-swap.service
                  ...
                  ​
                  You are spending an awfully long time in firmware.
                  Perhaps enable Fast boot in your "BIOS" settings?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by aviallon View Post

                    You are spending an awfully long time in firmware.
                    Perhaps enable Fast boot in your "BIOS" settings?
                    Unfortunately it's already using the fastest boot mode that still enables USB keyboard (no overclocking, no CSM, many things disabled - training the DDR4 XMP settings takes time). I need the keyboard to choose an alternative entry in systemd-boot if something fails. I tried to enable the fastest mode earlier, but had to reset the BIOS settings. I didn't want to reconfigure all temp curves for the fans so it's easier this way.

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