Dell Resources: SPECjbb2005 Performance and Power Consumption (pdf)
In tests for performance and power consumption of multi-processor AMD-based blade servers running the Solaris 10 OS, the Dell PowerEdge M905 blade server produced the strongest results. For more info on running Solaris on Dell, see: http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/topics/dell/
Hi,
This thread has been posted before on linuxquestions.org, but no answer, maybe because this is unix question and not linux. I'm posting the same thread here, hope I can get an answer from someone in the meantime, I wish I could post of emergency thread but it needs bits which I don't have :... (6 Replies)
Hi
Is there any native commands or somewhere in the /proc files to get the machine's power consumption? I googled for a while and cannot really find this information
Thanks for your help. (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have AIX processes something as below, how to know the resources consumption group by process pattern "price" and "devdb"?
eg:
CPU RAM WIO
price 20% 250M 5%
devdb 30% 1000M 8%
oracle 2990122 1 0 10:33:39 - 0:00... (1 Reply)
hi friends, we are relocating our DC and need to plan out electrical power for the new DC.
are there ways i could find the actual power consumption from my current servers ? instead of the product specs. (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am about to try Solaris 10 on a dell power edge 1950 server. I have googled and found some articles(2007) saying its not supported. Anybody tried this recently?
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
X11PERFCOMP(1) General Commands Manual X11PERFCOMP(1)NAME
x11perfcomp - X11 server performance comparison program
SYNTAX
x11perfcomp [ -r | -ro ] [ -l label_file ] files
DESCRIPTION
The x11perfcomp program merges the output of several x11perf(1) runs into a nice tabular format. It takes the results in each file, fills
in any missing test results if necessary, and for each test shows the objects/second rate of each server. If invoked with the -r or -ro
options, it shows the relative performance of each server to the first server.
Normally, x11perfcomp uses the first file specified to determine which specific tests it should report on. Some (non-DEC :) servers may
fail to perform all tests. In this case, x11perfcomp automatically substitutes in a rate of 0.0 objects/second. Since the first file
determines which tests to report on, this file must contain a superset of the tests reported in the other files, else x11perfcomp will
fail.
You can provide an explicit list of tests to report on by using the -l switch to specify a file of labels. You can create a label file by
using the -label option in x11perf.
OPTIONS
x11perfcomp accepts the options listed below:
-r Specifies that the output should also include relative server performance.
-ro Specifies that the output should include only relative server performance.
-l label_file Specifies a label file to use.
X DEFAULTS
There are no X defaults used by this program.
SEE ALSO X(7), x11perf(1)AUTHORS
Mark Moraes wrote the original scripts to compare servers.
Joel McCormack just munged them together a bit.
X Version 11 x11perf 1.5.4 X11PERFCOMP(1)