HP XU800 User Manual

Page 66

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66

2 System Board

Host Bus

NOTE

When upgrading a processor or installing a second processor, the processor
type and speed is automatically recognized by the BIOS. This means that no
particular switch settings are required.

Upgrading a single processor to a dual processor system on Windows NT
and Windows 2000 platforms is made easier with the HP DualExpress!
application which is included in the HP processor application kit.

Installing a second processor is only advantageous when the software can
make use of parallel activity. In particular, you need to be running a multi-
threaded operating system that supports multiprocessing (one that is SMP-
ready
), such as Windows NT. The Windows NT operating system makes the
best use of the Pentium III 32-bit architecture (though other operating
systems will also show some benefit if 32-bit application programs are run).

The two processors must have the same speed.

Configuring for
Multi-Processing

HP Kayak XU800 PC Workstations support Symmetric Multi-Processing
(SMP). When a second processor is added, it is automatically detected so
there is no specific configuration required.

The “mono-processing” mode has been implemented in order to support
operating systems that rely on the “legacy” interrupt controller 82C59 and
are not aware of I/O APIC controller operation. Refer to

page 68

for further

details.

Processor Clock

The 100/133 MHz Host Bus clock is provided by a PLL. The processor core
clock is derived from the Host Bus by applying a “fix ratio”.

Bus Frequencies

There is a 14.318 MHz crystal oscillator on the system board. This frequency
is multiplied to 133 MHz by a phase-locked loop. This is further scaled by an
internal clock multiplier within the processor.

The bus frequency and the processor voltage are set automatically.

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