Operating System - HP-UX
1834828 Members
2349 Online
110070 Solutions
New Discussion

Processing power comparison

 
SOLVED
Go to solution
Luis Miguel Parra Chica
Occasional Advisor

Processing power comparison

Is it possible to compare the processing
power between several families? I mean,
is it possible to affirm: [ for instance
] the performance of a 6CPUs-K380 is the
same that the performance of a
4CPUs-L2000.

Is any table, any web available with
that kind of data? Are that sort of
comparisons reliable?

You can see some information about
that on:
http://www.hp.com/products1/unixservers/midrange/kclass/infolibrary/index.html
http://www.hp.com/products1/unixservers/entrylevel/lclass/specifications/index.h
tml

but is NOT enough. The main point is the
comparison.

Thanks in advance

Touching that is DANGEROUS
4 REPLIES 4
Alan Riggs
Honored Contributor

Re: Processing power comparison

http:\\tpc.org
Andy Zybert
Advisor

Re: Processing power comparison

When modelling workloads on different models/manufacturer/configurations of kit, the specint_rate95 is usually used.

HP/SUN/INTEL etc subscribe to this methodology by submitted specint_rate's on their models at different cpu levels against a set of benchmarks.

I think the site is:

http://www.dl.ac.uk/TCSC/disco/Benchmarks/spec.htm

Currently any modelling is done using specint_rate95 but the newer specint_rate2000 will be used when sufficient results have been posted.l
DTS beats Dolby Digital 5:1
Andy Zybert
Advisor
Solution

Re: Processing power comparison

My own records indicate the relative performance of the models mentioned using specint_rate96 comparisions are:

K380 x 6cpu =935
L2000 x 4cpu = 1186

Therefore in processing power alone the L2000 system should be 20% more powerful.

I would suggest you read the individual test specifications at the site mentioned to ensure comparable systems were used i.e memory/disk subsystems/cache etc
DTS beats Dolby Digital 5:1
Philip Chan_1
Respected Contributor

Re: Processing power comparison

Hi,

You can compare their SPEC rates, which mean their SPECint_rate95 and SPECfp_rate95 rates.

SPECint_rate95 rates for many different machines (HP, Sun, IBM, Alpha, ...etc.) can be found at

http://www.specbench.org/osg/cpu95/results/rint95.html

For SPECfp_rate95 the link is

http://www.specbench.org/osg/cpu95/results/rfp95.html

Sometimes you may not find the exact hardware looking for, in that case you can pick some reference models. For example, K380/6 way isn't on the list, but you can reference the SPEC rates for K580/6 way instead because their processing throughput are the same. Same thing apply for L2000/4 way, the rates for N4000/4 way can be used.

Eg.
int_rate95 fp_rate95
K580/6 902 604
N4000/4 1209 1495

Do some simple maths on the above figures then you'll know how much faster the N4000 is. Presuming your applications aren't I/O bounded, performance projection by these figures are very accurate.

Rgds,
Philip