Sponsored Content
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing IBM Hardware: Test speed of an execution core reliably. Post 302845945 by Devyn on Thursday 22nd of August 2013 04:25:33 PM
Old 08-22-2013
IBM Hardware: Test speed of an execution core reliably.

Hey Folks,

Doing simple floating point or integer arithmetic is limited since if another execution core is not busy, the system will (presumably?) assign CPU resources to where they are needed so I could be getting the performance of 2 or more cores theoretically?

Any good reliable way to benchmark this on IBM Hardware?

For example, some older Power systems come rated with higher MHz rates but I want to see that advantage, if applicable, in a simple test. Anyway to do this through the CLI without having to install anything new or big?

Cheers,
DH
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

FTP Speed Problem on IBM P-Series equiped with AIX 5.2

Hi, We have IBM P-Series servers (P690, P650) equiped with AIX 5.2. Further we have 10/100 MB ethernet cards in P650 and 10/100/1000 MB ethernet cards in P690 servers. Servers are on a LAN connected with Cisco 3750 catalyst switch. FTP from one server to another is very slow,,,even 3-4 MB... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aqeelcu@hotmail
3 Replies

2. AIX

IBM Hardware question

I am looking to buy a 7044 - either a 170 or 270. From what I can find on web searchs the 170 is NOT upgradable to more that one CPU? Is that correct? Can I upgrade the planer on a 170 to a 270 to support multiple CPU's? Does anyone have any other suggestion for AIX hardware? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dizman67
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

speed test +20,000 file existance checks too slow

Need to make a very fast file existence checker. Passing in 20-50K num of files In the code below ${file} is a file with a listing of +20,000 files. test_speed is the script. I am commenting out the results of <time test_speed try>. The normal "test -f" is much much too slow when a system... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nullwhat
2 Replies

4. AIX

core dump generation in IBM machine

Hi, im getting a core dump file in a AIX machine while using a complex c++ program. The same program is working without any core error in another system with sun OS 5.9. The program has used structs, LL's and lots of call by references. What may be the reason. will it be a problem with the OS ? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh_kb211
3 Replies

5. Solaris

hardware test fails

Hi, I have a SunFire 280R abd when I boot it there is a hardware check running and it fails. Here is a long output of the test rsc> poweron Are you sure you want to turn your system power on (Yes/No)? yes rsc> console RSC Alert: Host System has Reset @(#)OBP 4.5.10 2002/02/11 10:39... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tex-Twil
2 Replies

6. Hardware

Hardware Correction: How to change DVD write speed

I am now on Kernel 2.6.32-26 For me 16x CD write speed is okay. I have old hardware which was able to write DVDs at 1x, back in previous linux version. Now, I dont get speed of less than 4x. Tested on k3b, xfburn, and brasero. But all start at bottom 4x write speed. k3b forced back to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: makh
0 Replies

7. AIX

New to AIX and IBM Hardware. Need some info

Hello all. I'm new to AIX and IBM hardware and I have a question around the configuration of the service processor on the power series. I need to know: 1) How do I get into the service processor from the serial console when AIX is up and running. I come from the Sun world and I tried all I know.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: glenc2004
1 Replies

8. Hardware

How to test the speed of your WIFI network?

Dear all, Would you know how to measure the max speed of a WIFI connection between a router and a laptop for instance? Many thanks for your help! Regards, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: freddie50
3 Replies
core(4) 						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							   core(4)

NAME
core - format of core image file DESCRIPTION
The HP-UX system writes out a file containing a core image of a terminated process when certain signals are received (see signal(5) for the list of reasons). The most common causes are memory violations, illegal instructions, floating point exceptions, bus errors, and user-gen- erated quit signals. The core image file is called and is written in the process's working directory (provided it is allowed by normal access controls). A process with an effective user ID different from its real user ID does not produce a core image. The file contains sufficient information to determine what the process was doing at the time of its termination. Core file contents con- sist of objects that represent different segments of a process. Each object is preceded by a data structure, and each data structure describes the corresponding object following it. The structure is defined in and includes the following members: The space and addr members specify the virtual memory address in the process where the described object began. The len member is the length of the object in bytes. The following possible values for type are defined in Process data as it existed at the time the core image was created. This includes initialized data, uninitialized data, and the heap at the time the core image is generated. A compiler-dependent data structure containing the exec data structure, the magic number of the executable file, and the command (see the declaration of the structure in The version number of the core format produced. This number changes with each HP-UX release where the core format itself has changed. However, it does not neces- sarily change with every HP-UX release. can thus be easily used by core-reading tools to determine whether they are compatible with a given core image. This type is expressed by a four-byte binary integer. The null-terminated version string associated with the kernel at the time the core image was generated. An architecture-dependent data structure containing per-process information such as hardware register contents. See the declaration of the structure in Process stack contents at the time the core image was created. Objects dumped in a image file are not arranged in any particular order. Use information to determine the type of the object that immedi- ately follows it. SEE ALSO
adb(1), coreadm(1M), coreadm(2), setuid(2), crt0(3), end(3C), signal(5). core(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:44 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy