07-07-2006
Benchmark AMD 2200+MP system
Linux Bench SLES9.1 Amd 2200M+MP
CPU/Speed: AMD 2000+MP (2 CPU's)
Ram: 1Gb
Motherboard: MSI K7D
Bus: PCI
Cache: 128 L2
Controller: IDE ATA133
Disk: 2 40Gb 7200Rpm ATA133 disk
Load: 1 user, Oracle 10g, Mysql 5
Kernel: Linux 2.6
Kernel ELF?:
pgms: N/A
Results ----------------------------------------------------------------------
==============================================================
BYTE UNIX Benchmarks (Version 3.11)
System -- Linux dl07srv01 2.6.5-7.257-smp #1 SMP Mon May 15 14:14:14 UTC 2006 i686 athlon i386 GNU/Linux
Start Benchmark Run: Thu Jul 6 23:03:35 CEST 2006
1 interactive users.
Dhrystone 2 without register variables 4090615.2 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Dhrystone 2 using register variables 4111449.4 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = arithoh) 8161354.9 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = register) 357482.8 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = short) 350354.2 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = int) 357479.0 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = long) 356898.3 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = float) 716925.6 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = double) 731879.6 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
System Call Overhead Test 1658798.0 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Pipe Throughput Test 700396.3 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Pipe-based Context Switching Test 37342.7 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Process Creation Test 11070.9 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
Execl Throughput Test 2309.9 lps (9 secs, 6 samples)
File Read (10 seconds) 2778913.0 KBps (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Write (10 seconds) 235106.0 KBps (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Copy (10 seconds) 66635.0 KBps (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Read (30 seconds) 3089190.0 KBps (30 secs, 6 samples)
File Write (30 seconds) 234512.0 KBps (30 secs, 6 samples)
File Copy (30 seconds) 39435.0 KBps (30 secs, 6 samples)
C Compiler Test 671.3 lpm (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (1 concurrent) 1705.0 lpm (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (2 concurrent) 1305.7 lpm (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (4 concurrent) 714.6 lpm (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (8 concurrent) 370.7 lpm (60 secs, 3 samples)
Dc: sqrt(2) to 99 decimal places 48990.2 lpm (60 secs, 6 samples)
Recursion Test--Tower of Hanoi 58899.7 lps (10 secs, 6 samples)
INDEX VALUES
TEST BASELINE RESULT INDEX
Arithmetic Test (type = double) 2541.7 731879.6 287.9
Dhrystone 2 without register variables 22366.3 4090615.2 182.9
Execl Throughput Test 16.5 2309.9 140.0
File Copy (30 seconds) 179.0 39435.0 220.3
Pipe-based Context Switching Test 1318.5 37342.7 28.3
Shell scripts (8 concurrent) 4.0 370.7 92.7
=========
SUM of 6 items 952.1
AVERAGE 158.7
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LSCPU(1) User Commands LSCPU(1)
NAME
lscpu - display information on CPU architecture
SYNOPSIS
lscpu [-hpx] [-s directory]
DESCRIPTION
lscpu gathers CPU architecture information like number of CPUs, threads, cores, sockets, NUMA nodes, information about CPU caches, CPU fam-
ily, model, bogoMIPS, byte order and stepping from sysfs and /proc/cpuinfo, and prints it in a human-readable format. It supports both
online and offline CPUs. It can also print out in a parsable format, including how different caches are shared by different CPUs, which
can be fed to other programs.
OPTIONS
-h, --help
Print a help message.
-p, --parse [=list]
Print out in parsable instead of human-readable format.
If the list argument is not given then the default backwardly compatible output is printed. The backwardly compatible format uses
two commas to separate CPU cache columns. If no CPU caches are identified, then the cache columns are not printed at all.
The list argument is comma delimited list of the columns. Currently supported are CPU, Core, Node, Socket, Book and Cache columns.
If the list argument is given then always all requested columns are printed in the defined order. The Cache columns are separated by
':'.
Note that the optional list argument cannot be separated from the option by a space, the correct form is for example '-p=cpu,node'
or '--parse=cpu,node'.
-s, --sysroot directory
Use the specified directory as system root. This allows you to inspect a snapshot from a different system.
-x, --hex
Use hexadecimal masks for CPU sets (e.g. 0x3). The default is to print the sets in list format (e.g. 0,1).
BUGS
The basic overview about CPU family, model, etc. is always based on the first CPU only.
Sometimes in Xen Dom0 the kernel reports wrong data.
AUTHOR
Cai Qian <qcai@redhat.com>
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
AVAILABILITY
The lscpu command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux February 2011 LSCPU(1)