Hi,
I read the following paragraph in the MemTest86 User Manual. As it describes, we did see the warning message during test.
"Starting from MemTest86 v6.2, potentially two passes of row hammer testing are performed. On the first pass, address pairs are hammered at the highest possible rate. If errors are detected on the first pass, errors are not immediately reported and a second pass is started. In this pass, address pairs are hammered at a lower rate deemed as the worst case scenario by memory vendors (200K accesses per 64ms). If errors are also detected in this pass, the errors are reported to the user as normal. However, if only the first pass produces an error, a warning message is instead displayed to the user."
I have some questions, as the folloings. Hope some expert could help.
Q1: How is the 200K access distributed in the 64ms of 2nd pass ?
Q2: What is number of the "highest possible rate" in first pass ? Would it be the same distribution way as 2nd pass ?
Very appreciate your help.
Frank
I read the following paragraph in the MemTest86 User Manual. As it describes, we did see the warning message during test.
"Starting from MemTest86 v6.2, potentially two passes of row hammer testing are performed. On the first pass, address pairs are hammered at the highest possible rate. If errors are detected on the first pass, errors are not immediately reported and a second pass is started. In this pass, address pairs are hammered at a lower rate deemed as the worst case scenario by memory vendors (200K accesses per 64ms). If errors are also detected in this pass, the errors are reported to the user as normal. However, if only the first pass produces an error, a warning message is instead displayed to the user."
I have some questions, as the folloings. Hope some expert could help.
Q1: How is the 200K access distributed in the 64ms of 2nd pass ?
Q2: What is number of the "highest possible rate" in first pass ? Would it be the same distribution way as 2nd pass ?
Very appreciate your help.
Frank
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