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UNIX Standards and Benchmarks UNIX & LINUX Benchmarks (Version 3.11) Linux Benchmarks Amd a10 with 2 quadcore cpu and 8 gig ram Post 302873703 by ppchu99 on Tuesday 12th of November 2013 08:58:51 PM
Old 11-12-2013
Amd a10 with 2 quadcore cpu and 8 gig ram

my portal lab is an HP Pavallion 15 laptop, amd A10 2 x quadcore with 8 gig ram and 1 TB disk on windows 8, running VMware workstation 10,

RHEL6 , 6.4, Santiago release, 1 vcpu and 1 core , 2 gig of RAM allocated to this vm guest

Code:
BYTE UNIX Benchmarks (Version 3.11)
  System -- Linux rhel6_h1 2.6.32-358.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Jan 29 11:47:41 EST 2013 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
  Start Benchmark Run: Tue Nov 12 16:31:06 PST 2013
   2 interactive users.
Dhrystone 2 without register variables   11762927.5 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Dhrystone 2 using register variables     11879194.5 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = arithoh)         302148211.7 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = register)        1569445.0 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = short)           1557176.5 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = int)             1574460.4 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = long)            1570110.7 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = float)           2088343.3 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Arithmetic Test (type = double)          2122903.7 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
System Call Overhead Test                851737.3 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Pipe Throughput Test                     702805.6 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Pipe-based Context Switching Test          no measured results
Process Creation Test                      5450.1 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)
Execl Throughput Test                      no measured results
File Read  (10 seconds)                  2377532.0 KBps  (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Write (10 seconds)                  395555.0 KBps  (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Copy  (10 seconds)                   51799.0 KBps  (10 secs, 6 samples)
File Read  (30 seconds)                  2509413.0 KBps  (30 secs, 6 samples)
File Write (30 seconds)                  393711.0 KBps  (30 secs, 6 samples)
File Copy  (30 seconds)                   27801.0 KBps  (30 secs, 6 samples)
C Compiler Test                             564.1 lpm   (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (1 concurrent)               2594.0 lpm   (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (2 concurrent)               1158.1 lpm   (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (4 concurrent)                  0.0 lpm   (60 secs, 3 samples)
Shell scripts (8 concurrent)                516.3 lpm   (60 secs, 3 samples)
Dc: sqrt(2) to 99 decimal places          98704.8 lpm   (60 secs, 6 samples)
Recursion Test--Tower of Hanoi           124606.6 lps   (10 secs, 6 samples)

                     INDEX VALUES            
TEST                                        BASELINE     RESULT      INDEX
Arithmetic Test (type = double)               2541.7  2122903.7      835.2
Dhrystone 2 without register variables       22366.3 11762927.5      525.9
Execl Throughput Test                           16.5        0.0        0.0
File Copy  (30 seconds)                        179.0    27801.0      155.3
Pipe-based Context Switching Test             1318.5        0.0        0.0
Shell scripts (8 concurrent)                     4.0      516.3      129.1
                                                                 =========
     SUM of  6 items                                                1645.5
     AVERAGE                                                         274.3


Last edited by Scott; 11-12-2013 at 10:31 PM.. Reason: Code tags, please...
 

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PAWD(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   PAWD(1)

NAME
pawd - print automounter working directory SYNOPSIS
pawd [ path ... ] DESCRIPTION
pawd is used to print the current working directory, adjusted to reflect proper paths that can be reused to go through the automounter for the shortest possible path. In particular, the path printed back does not include any of Amd's local mount points. Using them is unsafe, because Amd may unmount managed file systems from the mount points, and thus including them in paths may not always find the files within. Without any arguments, pawd will print the automounter adjusted current working directory. With any number of arguments, it will print the adjusted path of each one of the arguments. SEE ALSO
pwd(1). amd(8), amq(8), ``am-utils'' info(1) entry. Linux NFS and Automounter Administration by Erez Zadok, ISBN 0-7821-2739-8, (Sybex, 2001). http://www.am-utils.org Amd - The 4.4 BSD Automounter AUTHORS
Erez Zadok <ezk@cs.sunysb.edu>, Computer Science Department, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA. Other authors and contributors to am-utils are listed in the AUTHORS file distributed with am-utils. 6 Jan 1998 PAWD(1)
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