Apache Benchmarks

In a web server configuration Apache immediately becomes the HTTP daemon of choice for anyone using Linux. Apache's ApacheBench is a relatively synthetic benchmark that can give us some baseline performance ideas without straying too far into the realm of artificial. We ran both configurations under 10 and 100 concurrent threads to demonstrate the number of requests per second the server can handle. These requests only reflect static HTML requests, which is useful for servers like AnandTech that run on cached pages.




This benchmark demonstrates more of what we actually anticipated with the database benchmark on the previous page. The V40z with the quad Opteron 875 performs 90% faster than the quad Opteron 250 we looked at before. It's also interesting to note the difference between Solaris 10 and SLES 9 here. As the threads increased, there was a wider gap between performance of the Solaris configuration and the SLES configuration in favor of SLES 9.

Database Benchmarks Rendering Benchmarks
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  • Den - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    Interesting article, I am confused why you are dissapointed in the GCC complile time though. The dual core machine took 369 seconds (with 9 jobs) and the single took 603.18 seconds (with 5 jobs). 603.18/369=1.635 or 63.5% faster which is well in the 50-80% range. Your article says 43% faster, so maybe the GCC compile conclusion is based on a typo?
  • Kilim - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    I saw the title to the PS3/XBOX article. It was a different one than the original article from last week. I clicked on it to read it and nothing showed up. It was an article critical of the CPU's on the two systems I believe. Matbe Anand find some insider stuff that was only limited to a few people inside MS. If so, I think the potential rewards of protecting the source is much better long term than getting them in trouble and burning a bridge. Along with the long term effects of insiders trusting Anand.
  • jwbaker - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    You can no longer get v20z via ebay. I managed to buy a half-dozen of them for $1200-$1500 each, although I admit I had to collude with another buyer to do so. Probably Sun has enough traction with the v\d+z series that they no longer need the eBay channel.

    The only beef I have with the v-series is Sun can ben recalcitrant about supplying the voltage regulator modules. In the v20z there are four removable VRMs and if you bought a single-CPU machine, you only get 2. Additional VRMs sell in pairs for $175 but the lead time is indeterminant and sometimes very long.
  • Houdani - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    32: The article was pulled in order to protect one of the anonymous sources (see comment #10).
  • hondaman - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    Actually, no its not. RHEL is by far and away more widely distributed, and more likely to show results to the people who can most relate to this review.
  • finbarqs - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    i did read the comments, but i still don't know why it was taken down... it just said that it wasn't up to kris to take the article down.
  • Houdani - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    30: What's with the hate?

    And it was quite obvious to me there were multiple sources.
  • Questar - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    So that article was based upon one source?!?!

    translation: It was crap, our source was an idiot.
  • yacoub - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    Is there no performance increase seen with PC3200 RAM over PC2700?
  • PrinceXizor - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    If whomever is really worried about protecting his "insider" source, you might want to contact Google to have them clear the article from their cache (I don't even know if that's possible).

    P-X

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