Comment by PragmaticPulp
4 years ago
> Intel is the reason we don't have ECC RAM on desktops.
Intel has offered ECC support in a lot of their low-end i3 parts for a long time. They’re popular for budget server builds for this reason.
The real reason people don’t use ECC is because they don’t like paying extra for consumer builds. That’s all. ECC requires more chips, more traces, and more expense. Consumers can’t tell if there’s a benefit, so they skip it.
> AMD supports ECC on their consumer chips, but without Intel support it's never taken off
You’re blaming Intel’s CPU lineup for people not using ECC RAM on their AMD builds?
Let’s be honest: People aren’t interested in ECC RAM for the average build. I use ECC in my servers and workstations, but I also accept that I’m not the norm.
> You’re blaming Intel’s CPU lineup for people not using ECC RAM on their AMD builds?
I'm blaming the decade+ of Intel dominance for killing any chance of ECC becoming popular in non-server environments, just as RAM density was reaching the point where it is absolutely essential for reliability.
> The real reason people don’t use ECC is because they don’t like paying extra for consumer builds. That’s all. ECC requires more chips, more traces, and more expense. Consumers can’t tell if there’s a benefit, so they skip it.
Motherboard traces are ~free and the feature is in the die already, so it requires zero expense to offer it to consumers. Intel chose to artificially cripple their chips to remove that option. Yes, I know there are a few oddball lines where they did offer it. They should have offered it across the board from the get go, seeing as they were selling the same dies with ECC for workstation use.
> I'm blaming the decade+ of Intel dominance for killing any chance of ECC becoming popular in non-server environments
I disagree. AMD has offered ECC support for a while and it’s not catching on. It doesn’t make sense to blame this on Intel.
> Motherboard traces are ~free and the feature is in the die already, so it requires zero expense to offer it to consumers.
Yet it’s missing from a substantial number of AMD boards, despite being supported. You have to specifically confirm the motherboard added those traces before buying it.
Traces aren’t entirely free. Modern boards are densely packed and manufacturers aren’t interested in spending extra time on routing for a feature that consumers aren’t interested in anyway.
> Traces aren’t entirely free. Modern boards are densely packed and manufacturers aren’t interested in spending extra time on routing for a feature that consumers aren’t interested in anyway.
Or they just don't care because it's not already popular and unbuffered ECC RAM isn't even particularly widely available. The delta design cost of routing another 8 data lines per DIMM channel is tiny. Especially on ATX boards and other larger formats. I could see some crazy packed mini-ITX layout where this might be a bit harder, but definitely not in the normal cases.
(I've routed a rather dense 4-layer BGA credit card sized board; not exactly a motherboard, but I do have a bit of experience with this subject. It was definitely denser than a typical ATX board per layer.)
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> I disagree. AMD has offered ECC support for a while and it’s not catching on. It doesn’t make sense to blame this on Intel.
It does make sense. Imagine if only 50% of web browsers supported a feature, would you implement it in your website?
Point being, the low market share of ECC-compatible setups means that the market demand for ECC is low, which means that the selection is low, which means the prices are higher than they could be. So yes, absolutely Intel has contributed massively to the issue.
ECC memory on the other hand is always going to be more expensive.
Indeed, which is why it should be an option.
OTOH, it shouldn't be significantly more expensive. It should be ~9/8 the cost of regular memory. It's just one extra chip for every 8. Nothing more.
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>You’re blaming Intel’s CPU lineup for people not using ECC RAM on their AMD builds?
Yes. ECC was standard on first IBM PC 5150, on PS/2 line, on pretty much all 286 clones etc. Intel killed ECC on the desktop when moving to Pentium, prior to that all of their chipset products (486) supported it. 1995 artificial market segmentation shenanigans https://www.pctechguide.com/chipsets/intels-triton-chipsets-...
They did support ECC on some i3 simply because they did not bother to double the sku, however IIRC you need the server / WS S chipset to enable it. At which point just put an entry level Xeon on that.
In the absolute the cost of ECC everywhere would not be substantially greater than the prices we have now without. The current ECC prices are high because it is not broadly used, and not really the inverse. Consumer skip it because it is fucking hard to get ECC enable parts for S SKUs (or H / U) in the current situation, while there are plenty of non-ECC vendors and resellers, and something like at least 3 times the number of SKUs. And consumers have not been informed they are buying unreliable shit.
> Intel has offered ECC support in a lot of their low-end i3 parts for a long time. They’re popular for budget server builds for this reason.
Intel removed ECC support in the 10th gen so you have to go for Xeon nowadays.
With DDR5 you can have (a form of) ECC on all current 12th-generation Core CPUs. That is, if you were able to find DDR5 DIMMs on the market, which you currently cannot.
Not really: internal ECC in DDR5 is an implementation detail that is neither exposed on the bus nor giving you the real reliability and monitoring capability that real ECC terminated in the memory controller did. It is only there because the error rate would be absolutely horrific without, so you need internal ECC to get to basically the same point you were without ECC on DDR4.
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As far as I can tell, Intel only offered ECC on a small handful of i3 parts that mainly seemed to be marketed to NAS manufacturers, likely because they were otherwise giving up that market entirely to competitors like AMD. They really don't seem to be interested in offering it as an option on consumer desktops.