Re: Performance versus FreeBSD 7.0

From: debian developer
Date: Thu Mar 06 2008 - 12:30:06 EST


On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 7:08 PM, Stephen Cuppett <cuppett@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Not lobbing the first artillery shell by any means, but I saw this
> bullet on the FreeBSD release announcement:
>
> # Dramatic improvements in performance and SMP scalability shown by
> various database and other benchmarks, in some cases showing peak
> performance improvements as high as 350% over FreeBSD 6.X under normal
> loads and 1500% at high loads. When compared with the best performing
> Linux kernel (2.6.22 or 2.6.24) performance is 15% better. Results are
> from benchmarks used to analyze and improve system performance,
> results with your specific work load may vary. Some of the changes
> that contribute to this improvement are:
>
> * The 1:1 libthr threading model is now the default.
> * Finer-grained IPC, networking, and scheduler locking.
> * A major focus on optimizing the SMP architecture that was put in
> place during the 5.x and 6.x branches.
>
> Some benchmarks show linear scaling up to 8 CPUs. Many workloads see a
> significant performance improvement with multicore systems.
>
> The whole thing is available at:
>
> http://www.freebsd.org/releases/7.0R/announce.html
>
> However, their site is pretty scant on details about those benchmarks.
> Was just curious if anybody on this list had any input or links on
> the metrics, the hardware, the workloads, how was Linux or FreeBSD
> tuned, knew more information, could point me to the stats....

The benchmarks are posted here

http://people.freebsd.org/~kris/scaling/7.0%20Preview.pdf

page no 17-20.

A funny quote on CFS from above (page 19)

"The new CFS scheduler in 2.6.23 is "Completely Fair"...to
FreeBSD" :)

good to see some competition at last :D
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