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Motherboard Information

noaz edited this page Jan 5, 2016 · 27 revisions

This page lists motherboards that are tested - both failures and successes.

The motherboard selection can be important when using the PCIe interface on the NetFPGA-SUME card.

(Please add the release version used in testing)

Model CPU Chipset BIOS version Reported by Notes
ASUS Z87A Intel i7-4770 Haswell CPU @3.4GHz 1609 University of Cambridge
Supermicro X10DAi Intel E5-2643 v3 (Haswell) University of Cambridge
Supermicro X10DRG-Q Intel E5-2667 v3 (Haswell) University of Cambridge
Supermicro X9DRG-QF Intel E5-2620 v3 (Haswell) @2.0GHz Technion
Dell R630 Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2630 v3 @ 2.40GHz Intel Corporation Haswell-E PCI Express Root Port Cornell University
Dell R730 E5-2695 v3 @2.30GHz A06 University of Cambridge
Fatal1ty FM2A88X+ Killer AMD A10-7850K Kaveri 12 Compute Cores (4C+8G) 3.7GHz Socket FM2+ Chung-Yuan Christian University, Taiwan
ASUS H97-Pro Intel Core i7-4790 Processor (8M Cache @ 3.6 GHz) Chung-Yuan Christian University, Taiwan

These motherboards are known to be incompatible or have suffered some other sort of failure.

Model CPU Chipset Bios version Reported by Details of failure
Intel S2600IP Intel E5 Sandy Bridge University of Cambridge Sandy bridge cores will only run as PCIe Gen.2. BIOS update did not eliminate the problem. Refer to Intel Errata
Dell R720 Intel E5-2630 v2 (Ivy Bridge) @2.6GHz UCL/University of Cambridge/Cornell This platform was tested at UCL by members of the Cambridge team, and was ok. However, other members of the community (e.g. Cornell), experienced problems working with this platform, with regards to PCIe. The problem manifests as a (BIOS) link training failure.
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