Is this even possible?
Is this even possible?
I might be picking up an old, old, OLD P-120 sometime soon. It has only one PCI slot and two ISA slots. In order to make it useable as say, a router, I'm thinking of putting a USB 2.0 Card in it so I could connect USB Wireless and 10/100 Devices. Would it be able to use a USB 2.0 Card effectivly if I got one for it? The reason I ask is because I seem to remember that the PCI Bus was revised at one point, and I'm not sure that this comp would have compatibility with the revised PCI spec, whichthe USB Card would undoubtedly use.
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Well, the comp is reportedly an HP C110. As for the 10base card with two slots, that wouldnt be a problem, as I have a 10/100 PCI at my disposal, as well as a few ISA 10BaseT's. What I want USB for is the versatility in networking devices. Specifically, I want to be able to have two NIC's, a wireless device (802.11b for now, 802.11? in the future) as well as a v.9x Modem in it somehow (altho I bet I could still find a serial port version if I wanted to). If I cant get USB in this comp, I'd be limited to a 10/100, a 10, and a modem. I suspect that any PCI Wireless devices would also require the PCI 2.1 (or is it 1.2? A few tech-knowlageable friends on kali think its 1.2) spec.
I've looked up and down HP's site, even found a tech manual regarding the Cxxx series of HP computers, however I cant find any documentation regarding wether or not the PCI Slot in this comp is 2.1 or 1.2 or 365.247 or whatever. Should I go for this? If I cant get the USB2 card to work in this comp, I have another comp I could stick it in, altho I have another purpose for that comp and would rather not make my router of it.
I've looked up and down HP's site, even found a tech manual regarding the Cxxx series of HP computers, however I cant find any documentation regarding wether or not the PCI Slot in this comp is 2.1 or 1.2 or 365.247 or whatever. Should I go for this? If I cant get the USB2 card to work in this comp, I have another comp I could stick it in, altho I have another purpose for that comp and would rather not make my router of it.
It wouldnt really need an option in the BIOS if it was on its own self-Contained PCI card, right?
Anyway, I'm actually looking at a different solution. What kind of speed can an ISA 10/100 Pull? I'm thinking of getting a multi-mode Access Point that can function as a bridge (see other thread, comment on AP to use there please). So, what kind of speed can be expected from such a networking card? Surely one of you old fossils used and benchmarked an ISA 10/100
Anyway, I'm actually looking at a different solution. What kind of speed can an ISA 10/100 Pull? I'm thinking of getting a multi-mode Access Point that can function as a bridge (see other thread, comment on AP to use there please). So, what kind of speed can be expected from such a networking card? Surely one of you old fossils used and benchmarked an ISA 10/100
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the card will hit that speed but the system speed will slow it down.
i have a dual P2 400 Server well it had a 10/100NIC in it and i upgraded it to 10/100/1000, well my point is this even though its running at 1gigabit it cant hit that high high speed cause the cpu and bus cant keep up with it. so the slower the system is the slower the enet will be.
i have a dual P2 400 Server well it had a 10/100NIC in it and i upgraded it to 10/100/1000, well my point is this even though its running at 1gigabit it cant hit that high high speed cause the cpu and bus cant keep up with it. so the slower the system is the slower the enet will be.
What is your question in the end, then?
Can you use it as a router? Yes. I use a 486 33MHz with slow ISA nics as a router. Due to bandwidth limits on the ISA bus, I'm limited to 450k/sec transfer, but I'm happy with that. You don't need more to route a broadbandconnection either.
However, if you want more bandwidth, you need newer hardware. Seems pretty logic to me.
Can you use it as a router? Yes. I use a 486 33MHz with slow ISA nics as a router. Due to bandwidth limits on the ISA bus, I'm limited to 450k/sec transfer, but I'm happy with that. You don't need more to route a broadbandconnection either.
However, if you want more bandwidth, you need newer hardware. Seems pretty logic to me.
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Duh... I was thinking a 16-bit ISA @ 8.33Mhz would be 133.28 Mbits/s, but that would be the max theoretical throughput. In real life you would be lucky to get half of that.KompresZor wrote:Vader.... the ISA 10/100 would pull either 10 or 100Mbps the same as any other 10/100 card
I'll go sit in the corner now.......
As K-man says, you could theoretically fit 133 Mbits through the pipe, which is greater than the 100 Mbits of bandwidth the network has. However, the machine is so slow that it will never be able to keep up with all that data, so you'll never truly get 100 Mbits going through the machine.
If you're trying to use it as a router for cable or DSL, that might not exactly be an issue, because the highest bandwidth I've ever seen on a residental connection is 8 Mbits/sec, and that was my own.
If you're trying to use it as a router for cable or DSL, that might not exactly be an issue, because the highest bandwidth I've ever seen on a residental connection is 8 Mbits/sec, and that was my own.