[MinnowBoard] Minnowboard and a standard Nvidia GPU?

benjamin barber starworks5 at gmail.com
Thu Jul 16 00:55:31 UTC 2015


I am pretty sure that you can run open GL over TCPIP

On Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 5:04 PM, John 'Warthog9' Hawley <
warthog9 at eaglescrag.net> wrote:

> On 07/15/2015 08:42 AM, Ashot Arshakyan wrote:
> > Hello. I have a project where I need to render thousands of OpenGL
> > frames each second by using a x86 based PC and a typical high end NVidia
> > GPU.
> > The problem is I have a pretty limited space for the electronics of the
> > device I'm working on so I was hoping I could use a single board PC
> > instead of using a mini ATX.
> > SInce the main rendering job is done on the GPU, I thought the
> > Minnowboard CPU would be fast enough for the job. What are your thoughts?
> > Now I just need to know how I can connect a standard GPU to Minnowboard.
> > I'm thinking of powering the GPU with a flat 12V 30A power supply
> > instead of ATX to again save some space.
>
> So there's a couple of things you should be aware of while pondering
> this.  It *MIGHT* work, but you'll need to consider that modern graphics
> cards use a LOT of bandwidth for moving data in and out of the graphics
> card.  They usually employee 16 lanes of PCI-e, which at it's oldest and
> slowest is about 4GByte/s.  So there's two potential issues here:
>         1) The MinnowBoard only has a single lane of PCI-e v2
>            available for use through the high speed expansion
>            header.  This gives you a maximum throughput of
>            about 500MByte/s
>
>         2) *MANY* graphics cards won't negotiate their PCI-e
>            lanes down to the point where it will work in a x1
>            connector.  This is mostly an assumption from the
>            manufacturers that the card would never be used in
>            such a slot.  Case in point when we tried to get a,
>            admittedly rather high end, graphics card working on
>            the MAX on April 1st this year, it didn't work as
>            the card couldn't negotiate down to a single PCI-e
>            lane
>
> The only way to overcome 2, that I can think of, is to put a PCI-e
> switch on the bus that can provide 16 lanes, but only upstream via 1.
> This still limits your maximum bandwidth to 500MByte/s though, but it
> should get you past the lane negotiation issue.  That's a substantial
> amount of work though, and likely a need for a custom lure to be built
> to accommodate it.  Just some thoughts.
>
> - John 'Warthog9' Hawley
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