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Amiga Marketplace / Re: 5 Amiga books for sale U.S
« Last post by Pyromania on March 28, 2024, 10:18:03 AM »Sent!
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OVERVIEW
Zoomaniac has been written to evaluate the performance on a stock Amiga 1200 of
a general-purpose texture scaling routine that writes directly to a PED81C
raster.
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PERFORMANCE
The following results are relative to the full screen effect that zooms the
cosmonaut in and out.
On a stock Amiga 1200, the execution speed is between 25 and 26 fps. If the
staggered lines are turned on, the performance drops by about 1 fps (which was
unexpected, since all that such option adds is a Copper WAIT and a Copper MOVE
for each rasterline).
Given that the DMA load caused by PED81C is "double" (see its documentation for
the details), a version that uses only half the number (2) of bitplanes has been
made to check the performance as if the Amiga had a native chunky video mode.
Surprisingly, the performance did not improve at all: relatively to the CHIP bus
access, the scaling code must interleave so nicely with the bitplane data
fetches that having more bus cycles available does not make any/much difference.
An Amiga 1200 equipped with a 68030 clocked at 50 MHz and 60 ns FAST RAM easily
performs at steady 50 fps. To find out the maximum performance, new tests were
made with special versions of the program that had the video synchronization
code disabled.
The speed when running the program normally was between 77 and 78 fps. The
staggered lines option lowered the fps by about 2. The 2 bitplanes versions
performed better, reaching 80-81 fps or, with the staggered lines on, 79-80 fps.
Like on the stock Amiga 1200, the extended Copperlist that implements the
staggered lines causes a small and similar performance drop. Instead, the
halving of the bitplanes DMA load did produce a speed increase.
The following table sums up the results.
S = stock Amiga 1200
E = Amiga 1200 68030 @50 MHz / 60 ns FAST RAM (Blizzard 1230 IV)
2 = 2 bitplanes on
4 = 4 bitplanes on
L = staggered lines on
| 4 | L4 | 2 | L2
--+-------+--------+-------+-------
S | 25-65 | 24-25 | 25-26 | 24-25
E | 77-78 | 75-76 | 80-81 | 79-80
Notes:
* when FAST RAM is detected, an alternative and more suitable scaling routine
is used (although writes still happen to CHIP RAM);
* on (some?) machines equipped with FAST RAM an even faster strategy would be
rendering to FAST RAM and then simply copying at the maximum speed the
rendered frame to the CHIP RAM raster.
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TECHNICAL NOTES
* The scaling routine fits any rectangle from a texture into a rectangle of any
size and ratio of another texture with nearest-neighbor matching.
* Logic and rendering are totally asynchronous: the logic runs always at 50 Hz
and the rendering never stops (unless it reaches the limit of 50 fps, imposed
by the display refresh rate), thus exploiting the machine's full potential.
* The screen buffering employs three buffers in CHIP RAM.
* The screen resolution is 1020x256 SHRES pixels, which correspond to 255x256
LORES-sized physical dots and to 128x256 logical dots.
* The code is 100% assembly.
* The program takes over the system entirely and returns to AmigaOS cleanly.
Oh boy, that’s like saying latest Intel processors are made for Windows 2.0.
By A400, I presume you mean AS/400, which was renamed to OS/400 way back in 1988, only to be renamed a few more times since, currently it’s known as simply… i. Also, not UNIX (though providing compatibility layer for AIX software, AIX being the IBM UNiX)
Well, this is sysadm 101 stuff - plan for disaster - don’t put services and backups (eggs) all in the same physical location (basket). And it’s never been easier to make services georedundant, just about all providers offer multiple geographically separated sites and tons of tooling to help implementing proper redundancy. It’s easily worth the effort.
@F0LLETT
Thanks! That didn't take that long! Any more Amiga forum outages and I think Discord and Facebook will take over permanently! Just a worry I have!
Thanks for all the work you do and glad you have all your infrastructure intact to launch the A600GS. Good luck!
IBM propriety CPU for AiX and A400 UNIX servers