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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
 

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CHECKOBJ(1)						      General Commands Manual						       CHECKOBJ(1)

NAME
checkobj - check an object file to see whether it can be executed SYNTAX
checkobj [ -s ] [ -f ] [ -40 ] [ file ... ] DESCRIPTION
Checkobj attempts to determine whether the named files are valid executable binary files. It checks for size restrictions, including those due to the granularity of memory management on the PDP11. It is especially useful for overlaid object files, where there are a number of constraints. If a file is too large or improperly laid out, checkobj attempts to point out format changes that would allow the program to run. OPTIONS
Several options control the checks: -s Check for the use of separate I/D. If the file is separate executable, an error is flagged, and an appropriate way to load for a nonseparate machine is suggested if possible. -f Check for the use of floating point arithmetic without inclusion of the floating-point interpreter. -40 Combine the -s and -f options, to check for suitability for an 11/40-class PDP11. BUGS
The test for floating point is simple-minded. It is based on the definition of ``fltused'' by the C compiler and ``fptrap'' in the float- ing-point simulator. This test does not work if the object has been stripped. DIAGNOSTICS
The exit status is 0 if all named files are runnable with the specified options, nonzero otherwise. AUTHOR
Mike Karels, University of California, Berkeley 3rd Berkeley Distribution CHECKOBJ(1)
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