Database & Apache Benchmarks

MySQL 4.0.20d

MySQL has been a staple of our Linux tests since its inception. Even though it does not carry high relevance for a workstation test, we still regard it as the de facto free, open sourced benchmark for Linux. Below, you can see our results for sql-bench on both the 64-bit Red Hat kernel. Below, we ran the sql-bench insertion and select tests.


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 that the server can handle.


The X2100 serves considerably fewer pages than the bigger SunFire V40z, but what the X2100 lacks in performance here can be made up for in the wallet. A single SunFire V40z can outperform four X2100s, but even in the most expensive configuration, buying four X2100s is still a fraction of the cost of a V40z. For applications that scale well, such as web serving, the X2100 makes perfect sense. For applications that don't scale as well, like databases, you're better off with the heavier lifting V40z.

The Test Render Benchmarks
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  • erikpurne - Monday, September 12, 2005 - link

    "...seem too phased by this either;..."
  • Brian23 - Monday, September 12, 2005 - link

    Time to buy SUNW stock!
  • TwistyKat - Monday, September 12, 2005 - link

    I'd wait to see what happens after the Niagra launch. If that gains traction, the sky is the limit with SUNW.
  • cHodAXUK - Monday, September 12, 2005 - link

    Yep, Sun are starting to looking very interesting these days.

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