Cheap PPC alternative?
The Amiga community lacks of good and cheap hardware to run their operating systems on. Allthough there are some efforts done in this area, the prices of this products (both current and future) are high. There is however another solution available, which is pretty cheap. The only disadvantage is lower speed of PPC CPU.
Imagine a regular x86 machine with PCI slots and a PPC card in one of them. If such PPC card would be able to initiate Bus Master transfers, it could control the PCI bus totally and thus would become a complete PPC system.
The Crescendo/7200 card from Sonnet is a PCI card with either G3 or G4 CPU running at maximal 500MHz. It consists of a PPC CPU, CPU-to-PCI bridge (well documented, used in another Amiga-like project too), memory and L2 cache. It was designed as an accelerator for PowerPC Macintosh machines. However, due to the beauty of the PCI bus design, it may be easily used in regular PC's, provided they have one 5V PCI slot available.
Recently, I have been talking with the engineer of this card about the internals of this accelerator. It came out, that running this card in PC is perfectly feasible. The x86 CPU would be responsible for booting the PPC, routing IO accesses (probably) and routing interrupts (that's for sure). It does not have to be the newest, fastest and expensive PC. It may be as well an old, passively colled 200MHz x86 machine. Such oldtimer would be more than enough as an IRQ router. It it would be faster, it could be used as an fast and effective coprocessor with it's own memory.
The costs? The card itself may be bought for approx. 100USD. Any old PC might be used as a PCI bus and interrupt router (less than $20). The exact price would be determined by the cost of all peripherals (including memory for both x86 and PPC).
Since all AmigaOS-like operating systems (OS4/MorphOS/AROS) are fast and responsive even on slower CPU's. That and the fact that there would be an underlying x86 as a coprocessor ready for use, would provide very nice and effective PPC platform for Amiga operating system. Let's go dual CPU, let's go Bi-Endian :)
If only any team would like to have it.... ;)
Imagine a regular x86 machine with PCI slots and a PPC card in one of them. If such PPC card would be able to initiate Bus Master transfers, it could control the PCI bus totally and thus would become a complete PPC system.
The Crescendo/7200 card from Sonnet is a PCI card with either G3 or G4 CPU running at maximal 500MHz. It consists of a PPC CPU, CPU-to-PCI bridge (well documented, used in another Amiga-like project too), memory and L2 cache. It was designed as an accelerator for PowerPC Macintosh machines. However, due to the beauty of the PCI bus design, it may be easily used in regular PC's, provided they have one 5V PCI slot available.
Recently, I have been talking with the engineer of this card about the internals of this accelerator. It came out, that running this card in PC is perfectly feasible. The x86 CPU would be responsible for booting the PPC, routing IO accesses (probably) and routing interrupts (that's for sure). It does not have to be the newest, fastest and expensive PC. It may be as well an old, passively colled 200MHz x86 machine. Such oldtimer would be more than enough as an IRQ router. It it would be faster, it could be used as an fast and effective coprocessor with it's own memory.
The costs? The card itself may be bought for approx. 100USD. Any old PC might be used as a PCI bus and interrupt router (less than $20). The exact price would be determined by the cost of all peripherals (including memory for both x86 and PPC).
Since all AmigaOS-like operating systems (OS4/MorphOS/AROS) are fast and responsive even on slower CPU's. That and the fact that there would be an underlying x86 as a coprocessor ready for use, would provide very nice and effective PPC platform for Amiga operating system. Let's go dual CPU, let's go Bi-Endian :)
If only any team would like to have it.... ;)