stubbs@ncr-sd.SanDiego.NCR.COM (Jan Stubbs) (06/20/87)
My last posting inadvertently left out the results for which we have a new alltime winner: IOCALL RESULTS 10,001 Iteration Version, 6/17/87 SYSTEM UNIX VERSION SYSTEM TIME SECONDS ----------- ---------------- ------------------- Dec Pro-380 2.9 BSD 184 MicroVax I Ultrix V1.1 180 Altos 68000 SIII, Altos v2.0a 178.6 Dec Rainbow Venix/86 v2.0 177.5 DEC Rainbow100 w/NECV20 Venix/86 148 *d Onyx C8002s Z8000 SIII 137 *a Onyx C8002 Z8000 v7 130 Symmetric 375 10MHz NS32016 4.2BSD 128.7 TIL NS32016 9MHz No Wait states Local Port 122 PC/AT w/Sritek M68000 SV/68 Rel2 V1.0 114 Sequent Balance 21000 6 CPU 110.5 *c PC Limited 286-6 6MHz 80286 SCO Xenix SV/286 V2.1.3 100.5 Tandy 6000 8Mhz M68000 Xenix 3.0 109 ATT 3b2/300 SV 103 VAX 11/750 4.2 BSD 100 8 MHz 80286, 1 wait state Microport SV/AT286 2.2u 98.5 PLexus P35 12.5 MHz M68000 SIII 98 ICM-3216 10 MHz NS 32016 SV.2 98 PDP 11/44 ISR 2.9 BSD 95 Motorola S2000 10MHz M68000 SV/68 Rel1 94 Concurrent XF/200 (PE7350A) ? 93 VAX 11/750 4.3 BSD 90 Sun-2 10MHz 68010 4.2 BSD Rel 2.0 90 Sun-2 4.2BSD Rel 3.2 88 VAX 11/750 SV.2 88 Sun-2 10MHz 68010 4.2 BSD Rel 3.0 87 Plexus P60 M68000 SIII 87 PE 3220 V7 Workbench 85 *a ATT 3b2/400 SV.2 83 VAX 11/750 research version 8 81 NCR PC-8 8MHz 80286 SCO Xenix-286 SV R2.0.4 72.7 VAX 11/750 4.1 BSD 72 Radio Shack 16A Xenix (v7) 72 Sperry IT 8MHz 80286 Xenix 5.0 71 VAX 11/750 4.1BSD (lightly hacked) 70 PC/AT Venix 5.2 68 Arete 1100 M680?0 SV.2 65 *c ATT7300 Unix PC 10MHz 68010 SV.2 64 IBM PC/RT 170MHz 4.2BSD 64 Concurrent 3230 Xelos Rel R01 (SV) 64 Gould PN6080 UTX 1.1C 62 Pyramid 90x w/cache OSx2.5 61 Apollo DN300 10 MHz M68000 Domain/IX 60 *e IBM PC/RT 170MHz ? 60 Pyramid 90x w/cache OSx2.3 58 Plessey Mantra 12.5Mhz 68000 Uniplus SV Release 0 55 MicroVax II Ultrix/32-m V1.2 53.4 VAX 11/780 4.2 BSD 53 Concurrent 3250XP Xelos Rel R01 (SV) 52 MicroVax II Ultrix 1.1 52 HP9000-550 3cpu's HP-UX 5.01 51 *c PC/AT 7.5 Mhz Venix286 SV.2 51 Sun 3/52 16MHz 68020 50.1 VAX 11/780 SV.2 50 Convex C-1 4.2 BSD 46 Alliant FX/8 2 IPs, 4 CEs Concentrix 2.0 (4.2BSD) 43.3 *c IBM 4341 II UTS 2.4(V7 on VM) 42 Gould PN 6040 UTX/32 1.2 39.7 VAX 11/785 4.3 BSD 36 Sun-3/75 16.67Mhz 68020 4.2 BSD 36 Sun-3/160M-4 16.67Mhz 68020 4.2 BSD Rel 3.0 Alpha 36 DG MV10000 DG/UX 3.00 33 CT MightyFrame S/320 68020 CTIX (SV.2) 32.1 Apollo Dn330 12Mhz M68020 Domain/IX 30 *e VAX 11/785 SV.2 30 Celerity 1230 Accel/32 (NCR/32) 4.2 BSD 30 Gould Concept/97 UTX/32 1.2 (4.3BSD/SV2) 28 GEC 63/40 S 5.1 27 Gould PN9080 UTX 1.2 (4.3BSD) 25 Sperry 7000/40 aka CCI 6/32 4.2 BSD 19 VAX 8600 4.3 BSD 12 VAX 8600 Ultrix 1.2-1 11 IBM 3083 UTS SV 10 Amdahl 470/V8 UTS/V (SV Rel 2,3)V1.1+ 9 Cray X/MP-24 SysV (Pre release 8) 3.8 Amdahl 5890 UTS SV.2 3.63 Notes: *c Multi-cpu system. IOCALL was run single thread, which probably did not utilize all cpu's. This system probably has considerably more power than is reflected by the result. A better measurement of this system's capability is to run as many copies of IOCALL as there are processors, in a script with unique file names, and report half the sum of the resulting system times, which should be about the same on each processor, but slightly longer than the single copy time. *e Real time reported because system time appeared to be unreasonable. Some implementations of Unix kernel don't charge for CPU time to do IO properly. Send your results to me directly. The benchmark is a "C" program which measures Unix kernel performance. To run it put the source below in iocall.c, then: cc iocall.c -o iocall time iocall Send all 3 times (user, system, real), but I am reporting the system time only, the user time for this benchmark should be insignificant. The real time should be about equal to system time plus user time, if not you aren't running a real Unix, or your Unix has a bug. (Some people have reported finding a bug in their port after running IOCALL). Please also send: 1)Type of machine and model #. 2) Brand, model and clock rate of Microprocessor if any. 3) Version and name of OS, and its ancestry (e.g. SV2 or BSD 4.2) "The opinions expressed herein are those of the author. Your mileage may vary". Benchmark should be run on an otherwise idle machine. If you can please run them so, it does improve the timings. COMMENTARY: What does this benchmark measure? It attempts to simulate a typical mix of reading, writing and seeking. The cpu time used in the Unix kernel is reported by the kernel. It exercises the system call interface in a way less trivial than the getpid benchmark. It does not measure and is independent of, your IO hardware, and drivers. It does seem to show differences in Unix kernel efficiency on the same hardware. It will exercise heavily your caches, and perhaps your block move bandwidth. I have had some criticism of this benchmark to whit: It unfairly penalizes machines which do not have CPU data cacheing on the Unix buffer pool. My Response: It does penalize such machines, because it heavily emphasizes the function of copying data from the buffer pool and back again. No benchmark is perfect, but this one shows what a very IO intensive workload might be like on your machine. Many synthetic benchmarks are criticized for giving unrealistic results when run through optimizers that may throw out stuff that does nothing useful. This is NOT a problem with IOCALL. If your compiler finds something in the UNIX kernel that does nothing useful and throws it out, MORE POWER TO IT! -------cut----cut------cut------------------------------- /*This benchmark tests speed of Unix system call interface and speed of cpu doing common Unix io system calls. */ char buf[512]; int fd,count,i,j; main() { fd = creat("/tmp/testfile",0777); close(fd); fd = open("/tmp/testfile",2); unlink("/tmp/testfile"); for (i=0;i<=10000;i++) { lseek(fd,0L,0); /* add this line! */ count = write(fd,buf,500); lseek(fd,0L,0); /* second argument must be long */ for (j=0;j<=3;j++) count = read(fd,buf,100); } } -----cut---cut---cut---cut----------------------------------------- "There are lies, damn lies, and benchmarks." Jan Stubbs ....sdcsvax!ncr-sd!stubbs 619 485-3052 NCR Corporation Advanced Development 16550 W. Bernardo Drive MS4010 San Diego, CA. 92127
markb@mitisft.Convergent.COM (Mark Beyer) (06/22/87)
In article <1594@ncr-sd.SanDiego.NCR.COM>, stubbs@ncr-sd.SanDiego.NCR.COM (Jan Stubbs) writes: > Send your results to me directly. Jan, My email couldn't get to you so I'm posting this instead. Here's the results for our new machine: Machine: Convergent Server/PC CPU: 20MHZ 80386 OS: Unix System V.3 The times are: real: 20.41 user: 1.21 sys: 19.0 Mark Beyer