- Registered memory
:"Not to be confused with
ECC memory , although memory modules often use both technologies."Registered (also informally called buffered) memory modules have a register between theSDRAM modules and the system'smemory controller . They place less electrical load on the memory controller and allow single systems to remain stable with more memory modules than they would have otherwise. Registered memory is more expensive because of the additional components, so it is usually found only in applications where the need forscalability andstability outweighs the need for a low price (servers, for example). Although most server-grade memory modules are both ECC and registered, there are both, registered non-ECC modules and non-registered ECC modules.There is a performance penalty for using registered memory. Each read or write is buffered for one cycle between the memory bus and the DRAM, so the registered RAM can be thought of as running one clock cycle "behind" an equivalent unregistered DRAM.
References
* [http://www.2cpu.com/articles/44_1.html 2CPU.com review]
* [http://images10.newegg.com/UploadFilesForNewegg/itemintelligence/NI_System-Memory/NIC-Pro-Do_I_Need_ECC_and_Registered_Memory-v1.1e.doc Do I Need ECC and Registered Memory] (.doc document)
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