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  Linux Benchmarking HOWTO
  by Andr D. Balsa, andrewbalsa@usa.net  <mailto:andrew-
  balsa@usa.net>
  v0.12, 15 August 1997

  The Linux Benchmarking HOWTO discusses some issues associated with the
  benchmarking of Linux systems and presents a basic benchmarking
  toolkit, as well as an associated form, which enable one to produce
  significant benchmarking information in a couple of hours. Perhaps it
  will also help diminish the amount of useless articles in
  comp.os.linux.hardware...
  ______________________________________________________________________

  Table of Contents


  1. Introduction

     1.1 Why is benchmarking so important ?
     1.2 Invalid benchmarking considerations

  2. Benchmarking procedures and interpretation of results

     2.1 Understanding benchmarking choices
        2.1.1 Synthetic vs. applications benchmarks
        2.1.2 High-level vs. low-level benchmarks
     2.2 Standard benchmarks available for Linux
     2.3 Links and references

  3. The Linux Benchmarking Toolkit (LBT)

     3.1 Rationale
     3.2 Benchmark selection
     3.3 Test duration
     3.4 Comments
        3.4.1 Kernel 2.0.0 compilation:
        3.4.2 Whetstone:
        3.4.3 Xbench-0.2:
        3.4.4 UnixBench version 4.01:
        3.4.5 BYTE Magazine's BYTEmark benchmarks:
     3.5 Possible improvements
     3.6 LBT Report Form
     3.7 Network performance tests
     3.8 SMP tests

  4. Example run and results

  5. Pitfalls and caveats of benchmarking

     5.1 Comparing apples and oranges
     5.2 Incomplete information
     5.3 Proprietary hardware/software
     5.4 Relevance

  6. FAQ

  7. Copyright, acknowledgments and miscellaneous

     7.1 How this document was produced
     7.2 Copyright
     7.3 New versions of this document
     7.4 Feedback
     7.5 Acknowledgments
     7.6 Disclaimer
     7.7 Trademarks

  ______________________________________________________________________

  1.  Introduction


  "What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence."

       Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951), Austrian philosopher


  Benchmarking means measuring the speed with which a computer system
  will execute a computing task, in a way that will allow comparison
  between different hard/software combinations. It does not involve
  user-friendliness, aesthetic or ergonomic considerations or any other
  subjective judgment.

  Benchmarking is a tedious, repetitive task, and takes attention to
  details. Very often the results are not what one would expect, and
  subject to interpretation (which actually may be the most important
  part of a benchmarking procedure).

  Finally, benchmarking deals with facts and figures, not opinion or
  approximation.

  1.1.  Why is benchmarking so important ?


  Apart from the reasons pointed out in the BogoMips Mini-HOWTO (section
  7, paragraph 2), one occasionally is confronted with a limited budget
  and/or minimum performance requirements while putting together a Linux
  box. In other words, when confronted with the following questions:

  o  How do I maximize performance within a given budget ?

  o  How do I minimize costs for a required minimum performance level ?

  o  How do I obtain the best performance/cost ratio (within a given
     budget or given performance requirements)?

  one will have to examine, compare and/or produce benchmarks.
  Minimizing costs with no performance requirements usually involves
  putting together a machine with leftover parts (that old 386SX-16 box
  lying around in the garage will do fine) and does not require
  benchmarks, and maximizing performance with no cost ceiling is not a
  realistic situation (unless one is willing to put a Cray box in
  his/her living room - the leather-covered power supplies around it
  look nice, don't they ?).

  Benchmarking per se is senseless, a waste of time and money; it is
  only meaningful as part of a decision process, i.e. if one has to make
  a choice between two or more alternatives.

  Usually another parameter in the decision process is cost, but it
  could be availability, service, reliability, strategic considerations
  or any other rational, measurable characteristic of a computer system.
  When comparing the performance of different Linux kernel versions, for
  example, stability is almost always more important than speed.

  1.2.  Invalid benchmarking considerations


  Very often read in newsgroups and mailing lists, unfortunately:

  1. Reputation of manufacturer (unmeasurable and meaningless).


  2. Market share of manufacturer (meaningless and irrelevant).

  3. Irrational parameters (for example, superstition or prejudice:
     would you buy a processor labeled 131313ZAP and painted pink ?)

  4. Perceived value (meaningless, unmeasurable and irrational).

  5. Amount of marketing hype: this one is the worst, I guess. I
     personally am fed up with the "XXX inside" or "kkkkkws compatible"
     logos (now the "aaaaaPowered" has joined the band - what next ?).
     IMHO, the billions of dollars spent on such campaigns would be
     better used by research teams on the design of new, faster,
     (cheaper :-) bug-free processors. No amount of marketing hype will
     remove a floating-point bug in the FPU of the brand-new processor
     you just plugged in your motherboard, but an exchange against a
     redesigned processor will.

  6. "You get what you pay for" opinions are just that: opinions. Give
     me the facts, please.

  2.  Benchmarking procedures and interpretation of results


  A few semi-obvious recommendations:

  1. First and foremost, identify your benchmarking goals. What is it
     you are exactly trying to benchmark ? In what way will the
     benchmarking process help later in your decision making ? How much
     time and resources are you willing to put into your benchmarking
     effort ?

  2. Use standard tools. Use a current, stable kernel version, standard,
     current gcc and libc and a standard benchmark. In short, use the
     LBT (see below).

  3. Give a complete description of your setup (see the LBT report form
     below).

  4. Try to isolate a single variable. Comparative benchmarking is more
     informative than "absolute" benchmarking. I cannot stress this
     enough.

  5. Verify your results. Run your benchmarks a few times and verify the
     variations in your results, if any. Unexplained variations will
     invalidate your results.

  6. If you think your benchmarking effort produced meaningful
     information, share it with the Linux community in a precise and
     concise way.

  7. Please forget about BogoMips. I promise myself I shall someday
     implement a very fast ASIC with the BogoMips loop wired in. Then we
     shall see what we shall see !

  2.1.  Understanding benchmarking choices


  2.1.1.  Synthetic vs. applications benchmarks


  Before spending any amount of time on benchmarking chores, a basic
  choice must be made between "synthetic" benchmarks and "applications"
  benchmarks.

  Synthetic benchmarks are specifically designed to measure the
  performance of individual components of a computer system, usually by
  exercising the chosen component to its maximum capacity. An example of
  a well-known synthetic benchmark is the Whetstone suite, originally
  programmed in 1972 by Harold Curnow in FORTRAN (or was that ALGOL ?)
  and still in widespread use nowadays. The Whestone suite will measure
  the floating-point performance of a CPU.

  The main critic that can be made to synthetic benchmarks is that they
  do not represent a computer system's performance in real-life
  situations. Take for example the Whetstone suite: the main loop is
  very short and will easily fit in the primary cache of a CPU, keeping
  the FPU pipeline constantly filled and so exercising the FPU to its
  maximum speed. We cannot really criticize the Whetstone suite if we
  remember it was programmed 25 years ago (its design dates even earlier
  than that !), but we must make sure we interpret its results with
  care, when it comes to benchmarking modern microprocessors.

  Another very important point to note about synthetic benchmarks is
  that, ideally, they should tell us something about a specific aspect
  of the system being tested, independently of all other aspects: a
  synthetic benchmark for Ethernet card I/O throughput should result in
  the same or similar figures whether it is run on a 386SX-16 with 4
  MBytes of RAM or a Pentium 200 MMX with 64 MBytes of RAM. Otherwise,
  the test will be measuring the overall performance of the
  CPU/Motherboard/Bus/Ethernet card/Memory subsystem/DMA combination:
  not very useful since the variation in CPU will cause a greater impact
  than the change in Ethernet network card (this of course assumes we
  are using the same kernel/driver combination, which could cause an
  even greater variation)!

  Finally, a very common mistake is to average various synthetic
  benchmarks and claim that such an average is a good representation of
  real-life performance for any given system.

  Here is a comment on FPU benchmarks quoted with permission from the
  Cyrix Corp. Web site:

       "A Floating Point Unit (FPU) accelerates software designed
       to use floating point mathematics : typically CAD programs,
       spreadsheets, 3D games and design applications. However,
       today's most popular PC applications make use of both float-
       ing point and integer instructions. As a result, Cyrix chose
       to emphasize "parallelism" in the design of the 6x86 proces-
       sor to speed up software that intermixes these two instruc-
       tion types.



       The x86 floating point exception model allows integer
       instructions to issue and complete while a floating point
       instruction is executing. In contrast, a second floating
       point instruction cannot begin execution while a previous
       floating point instruction is executing. To remove the per-
       formance limitation created by the floating point exception
       model, the 6x86 can speculatively issue up to four floating
       point instructions to the on-chip FPU while continuing to
       issue and execute integer instructions. As an example, in a
       code sequence of two floating point instructions (FLTs) fol-
       lowed by six integer instructions (INTs) followed by two
       FLTs, the 6x86 processor can issue all ten instructions to
       the appropriate execution units prior to completion of the
       first FLT. If none of the instructions fault (the typical
       case), execution continues with both the integer and float-
       ing point units completing instructions in parallel. If one
       of the FLTs faults (the atypical case), the speculative exe-
       cution capability of the 6x86 allows the processor state to
       be restored in such a way that it is compatible with the x86
  floating point exception model.



       Examination of benchmark tests reveals that synthetic float-
       ing point benchmarks use a pure floating point-only code
       stream not found in real-world applications. This type of
       benchmark does not take advantage of the speculative execu-
       tion capability of the 6x86 processor. Cyrix believes that
       non-synthetic benchmarks based on real-world applications
       better reflect the actual performance users will achieve.
       Real-world applications contain intermixed integer and
       floating point instructions and therefore benefit from the
       6x86 speculative execution capability."


  So, the recent trend in benchmarking is to choose common applications
  and use them to test the performance of complete computer systems. For
  example, SPEC, the non-profit corporation that designed the well-known
  SPECINT and SPECFP synthetic benchmark suites, has launched a project
  for a new applications benchmark suite. But then again, it is very
  unlikely that such commercial benchmarks will ever include any Linux
  code.

  Summarizing, synthetic benchmarks are valid as long as you understand
  their purposes and limitations. Applications benchmarks will better
  reflect a computer system's performance, but none are available for
  Linux.

  2.1.2.  High-level vs. low-level benchmarks


  Low-level benchmarks will directly measure the performance of the
  hardware: CPU clock, DRAM and cache SRAM cycle times, hard disk
  average access time, latency, track-to-track stepping time, etc...
  This can be useful in case you bought a system and are wondering what
  components it was built with, but a better way to check these figures
  would be to open the case, list whatever part numbers you can find and
  somehow obtain the data sheet for each part (usually on the Web).

  Another use for low-level benchmarks is to check that a kernel driver
  was correctly configured for a specific piece of hardware: if you have
  the data sheet for the component, you can compare the results of the
  low-level benchmarks to the theoretical, printed specs.

  High-level benchmarks are more concerned with the performance of the
  hardware/driver/OS combination for a specific aspect of a
  microcomputer system, for example file I/O performance, or even for a
  specific hardware/driver/OS/application performance, e.g. an Apache
  benchmark on different microcomputer systems.

  Of course, all low-level benchmarks are synthetic. High-level
  benchmarks may be synthetic or applications benchmarks.

  2.2.  Standard benchmarks available for Linux


  IMHO a simple test that anyone can do while upgrading any component in
  his/her Linux box is to launch a kernel compile before and after the
  hard/software upgrade and compare compilation times. If all other
  conditions are kept equal then the test is valid as a measure of
  compilation performance and one can be confident to say that:

       "Changing A to B led to an improvement of x % in the compile
       time of the Linux kernel under such and such conditions".

  No more, no less !

  Since kernel compilation is a very usual task under Linux, and since
  it exercises most functions that get exercised by normal benchmarks
  (except floating-point performance), it constitutes a rather good
  individual test. In most cases, however, results from such a test
  cannot be reproduced by other Linux users because of variations in
  hard/software configurations and so this kind of test cannot be used
  as a "yardstick" to compare dissimilar systems (unless we all agree on
  a standard kernel to compile - see below).

  Unfortunately, there are no Linux-specific benchmarking tools, except
  perhaps the Byte Linux Benchmarks which are a slightly modified
  version of the Byte Unix Benchmarks dating back from May 1991 (Linux
  mods by Jon Tombs, original authors Ben Smith, Rick Grehan and Tom
  Yager).

  There is a central Web site for the Byte Linux Benchmarks.

  An improved, updated version of the Byte Unix Benchmarks was put
  together by David C. Niemi. It is called UnixBench 4.01 to avoid
  confusion with earlier versions. Here is what David wrote about his
  mods:

       "The original and slightly modified BYTE Unix benchmarks are
       broken in quite a number of ways which make them an unusu-
       ally unreliable indicator of system performance. I inten-
       tionally made my "index" values look a lot different to
       avoid confusion with the old benchmarks."


  David has setup a majordomo mailing list for discussion of
  benchmarking on Linux and competing OSs. Join with "subscribe bench"
  sent in the body of a message to majordomo@wauug.erols.com
  <mailto:majordomo@wauug.erols.com>. The Washington Area Unix User
  Group is also in the process of setting up a  Web site for Linux
  benchmarks.

  Also recently, Uwe F. Mayer, mayer@math.vanderbilt.edu
  <mailto:mayer@math.vanderbilt.edu>ported the BYTE Bytemark suite to
  Linux. This is a modern suite carefully put together by Rick Grehan at
  BYTE Magazine to test the CPU, FPU and memory system performance of
  modern microcomputer systems (these are strictly processor-performance
  oriented benchmarks, no I/O or system performance is taken into
  account).

  Uwe has also put together a Web site with a database of test results
  for his version of the Linux BYTEmark benchmarks.

  While searching for synthetic benchmarks for Linux, you will notice
  that sunsite.unc.edu carries few benchmarking tools. To test the
  relative speed of X servers and graphics cards, the xbench-0.2 suite
  by Claus Gittinger is available from sunsite.unc.edu, ftp.x.org and
  other sites. Xfree86.org refuses (wisely) to carry or recommend any
  benchmarks.

  The XFree86-benchmarks Survey is a Web site with a database of x-bench
  results.

  For pure disk I/O throughput, the hdparm program (included with most
  distributions, otherwise available from sunsite.unc.edu) will measure
  transfer rates if called with the -t and -T switches.

  There are many other tools freely available on the Internet to test
  various performance aspects of your Linux box.

  2.3.  Links and references


  The comp.benchmarks.faq by Dave Sill is the standard reference for
  benchmarking. It is not Linux specific, but recommended reading for
  anybody serious about benchmarking. It is available from a number of
  FTP and web sites and lists 56 different benchmarks, with links to FTP
  or Web sites that carry them. Some of the benchmarks listed are
  commercial (SPEC for example), though.

  I will not go through each one of the benchmarks mentionned in the
  comp.benchmarks.faq, but there is at least one low-level suite which I
  would like to comment on: the  lmbench suite, by Larry McVoy. Quoting
  David C. Niemi:

       "Linus and David Miller use this a lot because it does some
       useful low-level measurements and can also measure network
       throughput and latency if you have 2 boxes to test with. But
       it does not attempt to come up with anything like an overall
       "figure of merit"..."


  A rather complete FTP site for freely available benchmarks was put
  together by Alfred Aburto. The Whetstone suite used in the LBT can be
  found at this site.

  There is a multipart FAQ by Eugene Miya that gets posted regularly to
  comp.benchmarks; it is an excellent reference.

  3.  The Linux Benchmarking Toolkit (LBT)


  I will propose a basic benchmarking toolkit for Linux. This is a
  preliminary version of a comprehensive Linux Benchmarking Toolkit, to
  be expanded and improved. Take it for what it's worth, i.e. as a
  proposal. If you don't think it is a valid test suite, feel free to
  email me your critics and I will be glad to make the changes and
  improve it if I can. Before getting into an argument, however, read
  this HOWTO and the mentionned references: informed criticism is
  welcomed, empty criticism is not.

  3.1.  Rationale


  This is just common sense:

  1. It should not take a whole day to run. When it comes to comparative
     benchmarking (various runs), nobody wants to spend days trying to
     figure out the fastest setup for a given system. Ideally, the
     entire benchmark set should take about 15 minutes to complete on an
     average machine.

  2. All source code for the software used must be freely available on
     the Net, for obvious reasons.

  3. Benchmarks should provide simple figures reflecting the measured
     performance.

  4. There should be a mix of synthetic benchmarks and application
     benchmarks (with separate results, of course).

  5. Each synthetic benchmarks should exercise a particular subsystem to
     its maximum capacity.

  6. Results of synthetic benchmarks should not be averaged into a
     single figure of merit (that defeats the whole idea behind
     synthetic benchmarks, with considerable loss of information).

  7. Applications benchmarks should consist of commonly executed tasks
     on Linux systems.

  3.2.  Benchmark selection


  I have selected five different benchmark suites, trying as much as
  possible to avoid overlap in the tests:

  1. Kernel 2.0.0 (default configuration) compilation using gcc.

  2. Whetstone version 10/03/97 (latest version by Roy Longbottom).

  3. xbench-0.2 (with fast execution parameters).

  4. UnixBench benchmarks version 4.01 (partial results).

  5. BYTE Magazine's BYTEmark benchmarks beta release 2 (partial
     results).

  For tests 4 and 5, "(partial results)" means that not all results
  produced by these benchmarks are considered.

  3.3.  Test duration


  1. Kernel 2.0.0 compilation: 5 - 30 minutes, depending on the real
     performance of your system.

  2. Whetstone: 100 seconds.

  3. Xbench-0.2: < 1 hour.

  4. UnixBench benchmarks version 4.01: approx. 15 minutes.

  5. BYTE Magazine's BYTEmark benchmarks: approx. 10 minutes.

  3.4.  Comments


  3.4.1.  Kernel 2.0.0 compilation:


  o  What: it is the only application benchmark in the LBT.

  o  The code is widely available (i.e. I finally found some use for my
     old Linux CD-ROMs).

  o  Most linuxers recompile the kernel quite often, so it is a
     significant measure of overall performance.

  o  The kernel is large and gcc uses a large chunk of memory:
     attenuates L2 cache size bias with small tests.

  o  It does frequent I/O to disk.

  o  Test procedure: get a pristine 2.0.0 source, compile with default
     options (make config, press Enter repeatedly). The reported time
     should be the time spent on compilation i.e. after you type make
     zImage, not including make dep, make clean. Note that the default
     target architecture for the kernel is the i386, so if compiled on
     another architecture, gcc too should be set to cross-compile, with
     i386 as the target architecture.

  o  Results: compilation time in minutes and seconds (please don't
     report fractions of seconds).

  3.4.2.  Whetstone:


  o  What: measures pure floating point performance with a short, tight
     loop. The source (in C) is quite readable and it is very easy to
     see which floating-point operations are involved.

  o  Shortest test in the LBT :-).

  o  It's an "Old Classic" test: comparable figures are available, its
     flaws and shortcomings are well known.

  o  Test procedure: the newest C source should be obtained from
     Aburto's site. Compile and run in double precision mode. Specify
     gcc and -O2 as precompiler and precompiler options, and define
     POSIX 1 to specify machine type.

  o  Results: a floating-point performance figure in MWIPS.

  3.4.3.  Xbench-0.2:


  o  What: measures X server performance.

  o  The xStones measure provided by xbench is a weighted average of
     several tests indexed to an old Sun station with a single-bit-depth
     display. Hmmm... it is questionable as a test of modern X servers,
     but it's still the best tool I have found.

  o  Test procedure: compile with -O2. We specify a few options for a
     shorter run: ./xbench -timegoal 3 >
     results/name_of_your_linux_box.out. To get the xStones rating, we
     must run an awk script; the simplest way is to type make
     summary.ms. Check the summary.ms file: the xStone rating for your
     system is in the last column of the line with your machine name
     specified during the test.

  o  Results: an X performance figure in xStones.

  o  Note: this test, as it stands, is outdated. It should be re-coded.

  3.4.4.  UnixBench version 4.01:


  o  What: measures overall Unix performance. This test will exercice
     the file I/O and kernel multitasking performance.

  o  I have discarded all arithmetic test results, keeping only the
     system-related test results.

  o  Test procedure: make with -O2. Execute with ./Run -1 (run each test
     once). You will find the results in the ./results/report file.
     Calculate the geometric mean of the EXECL THROUGHPUT, FILECOPY 1,
     2, 3, PIPE THROUGHPUT, PIPE-BASED CONTEXT SWITCHING, PROCESS
     CREATION, SHELL SCRIPTS and SYSTEM CALL OVERHEAD indexes.

  o  Results: a system index.

  3.4.5.  BYTE Magazine's BYTEmark benchmarks:


  o  What: provides a good measure of CPU performance. Here is an
     excerpt from the documentation: "These benchmarks are meant to
     expose the theoretical upper limit of the CPU, FPU, and memory
     architecture of a system. They cannot measure video, disk, or
     network throughput (those are the domains of a different set of
     benchmarks). You should, therefore, use the results of these tests
     as part, not all, of any evaluation of a system."

  o  I have discarded the FPU test results since the Whetstone test is
     just as representative of FPU performance.

  o  I have split the integer tests in two groups: those more
     representative of memory-cache-CPU performance and the CPU integer
     tests.

  o  Test procedure: make with -O2. Run the test with ./nbench >
     myresults.dat or similar. Then, from myresults.dat, calculate
     geometric mean of STRING SORT, ASSIGNMENT and BITFIELD test
     indexes; this is the memory index; calculate the geometric mean of
     NUMERIC SORT, IDEA, HUFFMAN and FP EMULATION test indexes; this is
     the integer index.

  o  Results: a memory index and an integer index calculated as
     explained above.

  3.5.  Possible improvements


  The ideal benchmark suite would run in a few minutes, with synthetic
  benchmarks testing every subsystem separately and applications
  benchmarks providing results for different applications. It would also
  automatically generate a complete report and eventually email the
  report to a central database on the Web.

  We are not really interested in portability here, but it should at
  least run on all recent (> 2.0.0) versions and flavours (i386, Alpha,
  Sparc...) of Linux.

  If anybody has any idea about benchmarking network performance in a
  simple, easy and reliable way, with a short (less than 30 minutes to
  setup and run) test, please contact me.

  3.6.  LBT Report Form


  Besides the tests, the benchmarking procedure would not be complete
  without a form describing the setup, so here it is (following the
  guidelines from comp.benchmarks.faq):

  ______________________________________________________________________
  LINUX BENCHMARKING TOOLKIT REPORT FORM
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  CPU
  ==
  Vendor:
  Model:
  Core clock:
  Motherboard vendor:
  Mbd. model:
  Mbd. chipset:
  Bus type:
  Bus clock:
  Cache total:
  Cache type/speed:
  SMP (number of processors):
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  RAM
  ====
  Total:
  Type:
  Speed:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  Disk
  ====
  Vendor:
  Model:
  Size:
  Interface:
  Driver/Settings:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  Video board
  ===========
  Vendor:
  Model:
  Bus:
  Video RAM type:
  Video RAM total:
  X server vendor:
  X server version:
  X server chipset choice:
  Resolution/vert. refresh rate:
  Color depth:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  Kernel
  =====
  Version:
  Swap size:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  gcc
  ===
  Version:
  Options:
  libc version:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  Test notes
  ==========
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  RESULTS
  ========
  Linux kernel 2.0.0 Compilation Time: (minutes and seconds)
  Whetstones: results are in MWIPS.
  Xbench: results are in xstones.
  Unixbench Benchmarks 4.01 system INDEX:
  BYTEmark integer INDEX:
  BYTEmark memory INDEX:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  ______________________________________________________________________
  Comments*
  =========
  * This field is included for possible interpretations of the results, and as
  such, it is optional. It could be the most significant part of your report,
  though, specially if you are doing comparative benchmarking.
  ______________________________________________________________________



  3.7.  Network performance tests


  Testing network performance is a challenging task since it involves at
  least two machines, a server and a client machine, hence twice the
  time to setup and many more variables to control, etc... On an
  ethernet network, I guess your best bet would be the ttcp package. (to
  be expanded)

  3.8.  SMP tests


  SMP tests are another challenge, and any benchmark specifically
  designed for SMP testing will have a hard time proving itself valid in
  real-life settings, since algorithms that can take advantage of SMP
  are hard to come by. It seems later versions of the Linux kernel (>
  2.1.30 or around that) will do "fine-grained" multiprocessing, but I
  have no more information than that for the moment.

  According to David Niemi, " ... shell8 [part of the Unixbench 4.01
  benchmaks]does a good job at comparing similar hardware/OS in SMP and
  UP modes."



  4.  Example run and results


  The LBT was run on my home machine, a Pentium-class Linux box that I
  put together myself and that I used to write this HOWTO. Here is the
  LBT Report Form for this system:

  LINUX BENCHMARKING TOOLKIT REPORT FORM



  CPU



  ==



  Vendor: Cyrix/IBM



  Model: 6x86L P166+



  Core clock: 133 MHz



  Motherboard vendor: Elite Computer Systems (ECS)



  Mbd. model: P5VX-Be



  Mbd. chipset: Intel VX



  Bus type: PCI



  Bus clock: 33 MHz



  Cache total: 256 KB



  Cache type/speed: Pipeline burst 6 ns



  SMP (number of processors): 1



  RAM


  ====



  Total: 32 MB



  Type: EDO SIMMs



  Speed: 60 ns



  Disk



  ====



  Vendor: IBM



  Model: IBM-DAQA-33240



  Size: 3.2 GB



  Interface: EIDE



  Driver/Settings: Bus Master DMA mode 2



  Video board



  ===========



  Vendor: Generic S3



  Model: Trio64-V2



  Bus: PCI



  Video RAM type: EDO DRAM

  Video RAM total: 2 MB



  X server vendor: XFree86



  X server version: 3.3



  X server chipset choice: S3 accelerated



  Resolution/vert. refresh rate: 1152x864 @ 70 Hz



  Color depth: 16 bits



  Kernel



  =====



  Version: 2.0.29



  Swap size: 64 MB



  gcc



  ===



  Version: 2.7.2.1



  Options: -O2



  libc version: 5.4.23



  Test notes



  ==========

  Very light load. The above tests were run with some of the special
  Cyrix/IBM 6x86 features enabled with the setx86 program: fast ADS,
  fast IORT, Enable DTE, fast LOOP, fast Lin. VidMem.



  RESULTS



  ========



  Linux kernel 2.0.0 Compilation Time: 7m12s



  Whetstones: 38.169 MWIPS.



  Xbench: 97243 xStones.



  BYTE Unix Benchmarks 4.01 system INDEX: 58.43



  BYTEmark integer INDEX: 1.50



  BYTEmark memory INDEX: 2.50



  Comments



  =========



  This is a very stable system with homogeneous performance, ideal
  for home use and/or Linux development. I will report results
  with a 6x86MX processor as soon as I can get my hands on one!



  5.  Pitfalls and caveats of benchmarking


  After putting together this HOWTO I began to understand why the words
  "pitfalls" and "caveats" are so often associated with benchmarking...

  5.1.  Comparing apples and oranges


  Or should I say Apples and PCs ? This is so obvious and such an old
  dispute that I won't go into any details. I doubt the time it takes to
  load Word on a Mac compared to an average Pentium is a real measure of
  anything. Likewise booting Linux and Windows NT, etc... Try as much as
  possible to compare identical machines with a single modification.
  5.2.  Incomplete information


  A single example will illustrate this very common mistake. One often
  reads in comp.os.linux.hardware the following or similar statement: "I
  just plugged in processor XYZ running at nnn MHz and now compiling the
  linux kernel only takes i minutes" (adjust XYZ, nnn and i as
  required). This is irritating, because no other information is given,
  i.e. we don't even know the amount of RAM, size of swap, other tasks
  running simultaneously, kernel version, modules selected, hard disk
  type, gcc version, etc... I recommend you use the LBT Report Form,
  which at least provides a standard information framework.

  5.3.  Proprietary hardware/software


  A well-known processor manufacturer once published results of
  benchmarks produced by a special, customized version of gcc. Ethical
  considerations apart, those results were meaningless, since 100% of
  the Linux community would go on using the standard version of gcc. The
  same goes for proprietary hardware. Benchmarking is much more useful
  when it deals with off-the-shelf hardware and free (in the GNU/GPL
  sense) software.

  5.4.  Relevance


  We are talking Linux, right ? So we should forget about benchmarks
  produced on other operating systems (this is a special case of the
  "Comparing apples and oranges" pitfall above). Also, if one is going
  to benchmark Web server performance, do not quote FPU performance and
  other irrelevant information. In such cases, less is more. Also, you
  do not need to mention the age of your cat, your mood while
  benchmarking, etc..

  6.  FAQ


     Q1.
        Is there any single figure of merit for Linux systems ?

     A: No, thankfully nobody has yet come up with a Lhinuxstone (tm)
        measurement. And if there was one, it would not make much sense:
        Linux systems are used for many different tasks, from heavily
        loaded Web servers to graphics workstations for individual use.
        No single figure of merit can describe the performance of a
        Linux system under such different situations.

     Q2.
        Then, how about a dozen figures summarizing the performance of
        diverse Linux systems ?

     A: That would be the ideal situation. I would like to see that come
        true. Anybody volunteers for a Linux Benchmarking Project ? With
        a Web site and an on-line, complete, well-designed reports
        database ?

     Q3.
        ... BogoMips ... ?

     A: BogoMips has nothing to do with the performance of your system.
        Check the BogoMips Mini-HOWTO.

     Q4.
        What is the "best" benchmark for Linux ?

     A: It all depends on which performance aspect of a Linux system one
        wants to measure. There are different benchmarks to measure the
        network (Ethernet sustained transfer rates), file server (NFS),
        disk I/O, FPU, integer, graphics, 3D, processor-memory
        bandwidth, CAD performance, transaction time, SQL performance,
        Web server performance, real-time performance, CD-ROM
        performance, Quake performance (!), etc ... AFAIK no bechmark
        suite exists for Linux that supports all these tests.

     Q5.
        What is the fastest processor under Linux ?

     A: Fastest at what task ? If one is heavily number-crunching
        oriented, a very high clock rate Alpha (600 MHz and going)
        should be faster than anything else, since Alphas have been
        designed for that kind of performance. If, on the other hand,
        one wants to put together a very fast news server, it is
        probable that the choice of a fast hard disk subsystem and lots
        of RAM will result in higher performance improvements than a
        change of processor, for the same amount of $.

     Q6.
        Let me rephrase the last question, then: is there a processor
        that is fastest for general purpose applications ?

     A: This is a tricky question but it takes a very simple answer: NO.
        One can always design a faster system even for general purpose
        applications, independent of the processor. Usually, all other
        things being equal, higher clock rates will result in higher
        performance systems (and more headaches too). Taking out an old
        100 MHz Pentium from an (usually not) upgradable motherboard,
        and plugging in the 200 MHz version, one should feel the extra
        "hummph". Of course, with only 16 MBytes of RAM, the same
        investment would have been more wisely spent on extra SIMMs...

     Q7.
        So clock rates influence the performance of a system ?

     A: For most tasks except for NOP empty loops (BTW these get removed
        by modern optimizing compilers), an increase in clock rate will
        not give you a linear increase in performance. Very small
        processor intensive programs that will fit entirely in the
        primary cache inside the processor (the L1 cache, usually 8 or
        16 K) will have a performance increase equivalent to the clock
        rate increase, but most "true" programs are much larger than
        that, have loops that do not fit in the L1 cache, share the L2
        (external) cache with other processes, depend on external
        components and will give much smaller performance increases.
        This is because the L1 cache runs at the same clock rate as the
        processor, whereas most L2 caches and all other subsystems
        (DRAM, for example) will run asynchronously at lower clock
        rates.

     Q8.
        OK, then, one last question on that matter: which is the
        processor with the best price/performance ratio for general
        purpose Linux use ?

     A: Defining "general purpose Linux use" in not an easy thing ! For
        any particular application, there is always a processor with THE
        BEST price/performance ratio at any given time, but it changes
        rather frequently as manufacturers release new processors, so
        answering Processor XYZ running at n MHz would be a snapshot
        answer. However, the price of the processor is insignificant
        when compared to the price of the whole system one will be
        putting together. So, really, the question should be how can one
        maximize the price/performance ratio for a given system ? And
        the answer to that question depends heavily on the minimum
        performance requirements and/or maximum cost established for the
        configuration being considered. Sometimes, off-the-shelf
        hardware will not meet minimum performance requirements and
        expensive RISC systems will be the only alternative. For home
        use, I recommend a balanced, homogeneous system for overall
        performance (now go figure what I mean by balanced and
        homogeneous :-); the choice of a processor is an important
        decision , but no more than choosing hard disk type and
        capacity, amount of RAM, video card, etc...

     Q9.
        What is a "significant" increase in performance ?

     A: I would say that anything under 1% is not significant (could be
        described as "marginal"). We, humans, will hardly perceive the
        difference between two systems with a 5 % difference in response
        time. Of course some hard-core benchmarkers are not humans and
        will tell you that, when comparing systems with 65.9 and 66.5
        performance indexes, the later is "definitely faster".

     Q10.
        How do I obtain "significant" increases in performance at the
        lowest cost ?

     A: Since most source code is available for Linux, careful
        examination and algorithmic redesign of key subroutines could
        yield order-of-magnitude increases in performance in some cases.
        If one is dealing with a commercial project and does not wish to
        delve deeply in C source code a Linux consultant should be
        called in. See the Consultants-HOWTO.


  7.  Copyright, acknowledgments and miscellaneous


  7.1.  How this document was produced


  The first step was reading section 4 "Writing and submitting a HOWTO"
  of the HOWTO Index by Tim Bynum.

  I knew absolutely nothing about SGML or LaTeX, but was tempted to use
  an automated documentation generation package after reading the
  various comments about SGML-Tools. However, inserting tags manually in
  a document reminds me of the days I hand-assembled a 512 byte monitor
  program for a now defunct 8-bit microprocessor, so I got hold of the
  LyX sources, compiled it, and used its LinuxDoc mode. Highly
  recommended combination: LyX and SGML-Tools.

  7.2.  Copyright


  The Linux Benchmarking HOWTO is copyright (C) 1997 by Andr D. Balsa.
  Linux HOWTO documents may be reproduced and distributed in whole or in
  part, in any medium physical or electronic, as long as this copyright
  notice is retained on all copies. Commercial redistribution is allowed
  and encouraged; however, the author would like to be notified of any
  such distributions.

  All translations, derivative works, or aggregate works incorporating
  any Linux HOWTO documents must be covered under this copyright notice.
  That is, you may not produce a derivative work from a HOWTO and impose
  additional restrictions on its distribution. Exceptions to these rules
  may be granted under certain conditions; please contact the Linux
  HOWTO coordinator at the address given below.

  In short, we wish to promote dissemination of this information through
  as many channels as possible. However, we do wish to retain copyright
  on the HOWTO documents, and would like to be notified of any plans to
  redistribute the HOWTOs.

  If you have questions, please contact Tim Bynum, the Linux HOWTO
  coordinator, at linux-howto@sunsite.unc.edu via email.

  7.3.  New versions of this document


  New versions of the Linux Benchmarking-HOWTO will be placed on
  sunsite.unc.edu and mirror sites. There are other formats, such as a
  Postscript and dvi version in the other-formats directory. The Linux
  Benchmarking-HOWTO is also available for WWW clients such as Grail, a
  Web browser written in Python. It will also be posted regularly to
  comp.os.linux.answers.

  7.4.  Feedback


  Suggestions, corrections, additions wanted. Contributors wanted and
  acknowledged. Flames not wanted.

  I can always be reached at andrewbalsa@usa.net.

  7.5.  Acknowledgments


  David Niemi, the author of the Unixbench suite, has proved to be an
  endless source of information and (valid) criticism.

  I also want to thank Greg Hankins one of the main contributors to the
  SGML-tools package, Linus Torvalds and the entire Linux community.
  This HOWTO is my way of giving back.

  7.6.  Disclaimer


  Your mileage may, and will, vary. Be aware that benchmarking is a
  touchy subject and a great time-and-energy consuming activity.

  7.7.  Trademarks


  Pentium and Windows NT are trademarks of Intel and Microsoft
  Corporations respectively.

  BYTE and BYTEmark are trademarks of McGraw-Hill, Inc.

  Cyrix and 6x86 are trademarks of Cyrix Corporation.

  Linux is not a trademark, hopefully never will be.