WimMark I report for 2.5.69-mm8

From: Joel Becker (Joel.Becker@oracle.com)
Date: Fri May 23 2003 - 15:47:59 EST


WimMark I report for 2.5.69-mm8

Runs (deadline): 1087.95 1053.95 1043.80 1086.53 1049.23 1097.63
Runs (anticipatory): 670.52 967.77 977.69

        WimMark I is a rough benchmark we have been running
here at Oracle against various kernels. Each run tests an OLTP
workload on the Oracle database with somewhat restrictive memory
conditions. This reduces in-memory buffering of data, allowing for
more I/O. The I/O is read and sync write, random and seek-laden. The
runs all do ramp-up work to populate caches and the like.
        The benchmark is called "WimMark I" because it has no
official standing and is only a relative benchmark useful for comparing
kernel changes. The benchmark is normalized an arbitrary kernel, which
scores 1000.0. All other numbers are relative to this. A bigger number
is a better number. All things being equal, a delta <50 is close to
unimportant, and a delta < 20 is very identical.
        This benchmark is sensitive to random system events. I run
three runs because of this. If two runs are nearly identical and the
remaining run is way off, that run should probably be ignored (it is
often a low number, signifying that something on the system impacted
the benchmark).
        The machine in question is a 4 way 700 MHz Xeon machine with 2GB
of RAM. CONFIG_HIGHMEM4GB is selected. The disk accessed for data is a
10K RPM U2W SCSI of similar vintage. The data files are living on an
ext3 filesystem. Unless mentioned, all runs are
on this machine (variation in hardware would indeed change the
benchmark).
        WimMark I run results are archived at
http://oss.oracle.com/~jlbec/wimmark/wimmark_I.html

-- 

"One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important." - Bertrand Russell

Joel Becker Senior Member of Technical Staff Oracle Corporation E-mail: joel.becker@oracle.com Phone: (650) 506-8127 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/



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