VOGONS


First post, by appiah4

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I'm considering using the turbo button to short the External Cache Enable jumper on a motherboard. Is this safe? What happens if I or someone accidentally presses the Turbo button while the system is on and opens the jumper? Or vice versa? Is the jumper setting registered only at boot (or maybe even cold boot?) or is it constantly monitered while powered on? Would I cause electrical damage to the cache? Or would it simply do nothing?

Reply 1 of 4, by derSammler

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No damage, but instant crash of the OS.

Reply 2 of 4, by RJDog

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Yeah especially on older systems, these kinds of jumpers are more than just setting or unsetting a configuration bit that the CPU checks periodically or at boot. They actually directly enable or disable components (e.g by supplying voltage or not). In this case, it probably enables the cache directly; when the computer boots, it sees it's there and uses its addressing; when you remove the jumper it disables the cache and the CPU may (likely) still try to address the cache RAM that isn't there any more, so it crashes. Kind of like removing a RAM stick while it's on.

Reply 3 of 4, by appiah4

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Ok so it's ultimately electrically safe to do this, although accidentally using the switch would cause a crash and data loss. I'm ok with that.

Reply 4 of 4, by Jade Falcon

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Ether it crashes the system or nothing happens.