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Subject: Re: $333.70 per elo point over my pc..

Author: Matt Taylor

Date: 15:53:37 02/24/03

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On February 24, 2003 at 18:06:14, Jeremiah Penery wrote:

>I will respond to the stuff below, but the discussion is starting to get off
>course.  My assertion was that if Xeons suddenly added 50% to their clockrate
>overnight that they would begin to eat into the 'server' markets.  There are
>plenty of applications in that space that are CPU bound, where that super fast
>Xeon would fit nicely.  Of course it would not take the entire market, or even
>50% of the market.  I never said it would.  But I'd be willing to bet anything
>that it would take _some_ of that market (5%, 10%, who knows?).  That's all I
>ever tried to claim in this particular thread.
>
>
>On February 24, 2003 at 00:03:08, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>
>>On February 23, 2003 at 22:48:35, Jeremiah Penery wrote:
>>
>>>You seem to be ignoring that TPC-W has non-clustered x86 machines in the lead.
>>
>>
>>Where?
>>
>>Didn't see a one that wasn't a NUMA-type box with each machine having its
>>own I/O....
>>
>>I may have overlooked something of course.
>
>I posted it a few messages up in this thread.  But I overlooked something also,
>in that every submitted result for TPC-W is an x86 machine.  They're all listed
>as non-cluster machines, up to 16 CPUs, but I don't know what their definition
>of 'cluster' is.
>
>
>I see something else interesting though.  Top 10 TPC-C results for
>non-clustered(*) machines look like this:
>
>1) 128 CPU Fujitsu SPARC64 GP 563MHz
>2) 32 CPU Itanium2 1GHz
>3) 32 CPU POWER4 1.3GHz
>4) 64 CPU PA-RISC 8700 875MHz
>5) <same as 3>
>6) <same as 4>
>7) <same as 2>
>8) 32 CPU XeonMP 2GHz
>9) 32 CPU Alpha 21264A 1001MHz
>10) 48 CPU Sun SPARC64 GP 563MHz
>
>I'll isolate #s 8 and 9 here:
>
>8)
>Total System Cost   - 2,715,310 US $
>TPC-C Throughput    - 234,325
>Price/Performance   - 11.59 US $
>Availability Date   - 03/31/03
>Database Manager    - Microsoft SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition
>Operating System    - Microsoft Windows .NET Server 2003 Datacenter Edt.
>Transaction Monitor - Microsoft COM+
>
>9)
>Total System Cost   - 10,286,029 US $
>TPC-C Throughput    - 230,533
>Price/Performance   - 44.62 US $
>Availability Date   - 07/30/01
>Database Manager    - Oracle 9i Database Enterprise Edition
>Operating System    - Compaq Tru64 UNIX V5.1
>Transaction Monitor - Compaq DB Web Connector V1.1
>
>How can such a number be explained?  I would expect the Alpha machine to win by
>a large margin, but it actually loses.
>
>(*) Again, I don't know how they define cluster.  I am not aware of a Windows
>version that has any kind of NUMA optimizations, however, which I think would be
>necessary to get a very good score on this type of benchmark, if indeed the
>machines are NUMA ones.

"Operating System    - Microsoft Windows .NET Server 2003 Datacenter Edt."

Hello NUMA optimizations.

I, too, am not sure why the Alpha is beaten by the 2 GHz XeonMP (though only by
a narrow margin, <2%). I would say that comparing different databases is asking
for trouble, but I have heard that Oracle is the fastest database software
available.

I believe all Intel systems with more than 16 CPUs are -definitely- NUMA.
Supposedly they support 16P, but I have never seen one with that many
processors. Most larger systems are built with a NUMA cluster of 4P nodes.

-Matt



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