Debian 11 Performance Uplift Is Looking Great For Intel Xeon, AMD EPYC

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  • phoronix
    Administrator
    • Jan 2007
    • 67070

    Debian 11 Performance Uplift Is Looking Great For Intel Xeon, AMD EPYC

    Phoronix: Debian 11 Performance Uplift Is Looking Great For Intel Xeon, AMD EPYC

    This past weekend marked the release of Debian 11 "Bullseye" as the newest version of this major Linux distribution that is also the basis for many others. Given the popularity of Debian stable on servers, our first round of Debian 11.0 benchmarking is looking at the performance relative to Debian 10.10 on latest-generation Intel Xeon "Ice Lake" and AMD EPYC "Milan" hardware.

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
  • Linuxxx
    Senior Member
    • Jul 2011
    • 1062

    #2
    Kernel Details:

    - Transparent Huge Pages: always
    More than anything else this proves that Debian is fundamentally still a server-oriented OS, with Ubuntu having switched over to the saner upstream approach of "madvise" a long time ago.

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    • andyprough
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2012
      • 2434

      #3
      Looks to me like the performance improvements are simply from having better support for the newer hardware. I'm wondering if you ran benchmarks of these two on a 5-year old server, would you still see performance gains with Debian 11?

      Comment

      • onlyLinuxLuvUBack
        Senior Member
        • May 2019
        • 664

        #4
        Could we have a sequel ? Debian 11 Performance Uplift Part Deux : single socket showdown ? 5950x vs intel

        Part3ld boys: z230 hp vs what amd equivalent you have.

        Comment

        • grigi
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2008
          • 642

          #5
          I'm more interested in debian base for docker images. Debian-slim has always been a decent tradeoff of resource usage, performance and stability.
          Musl is improving year over year, but for some workloads is either not as reliable, or notably slower. The reliability issues with some systems drove me to use debian-slim much more.
          (e.g. gunicorn and alpine = weird errors)

          Comment

          • edwaleni
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2015
            • 1268

            #6
            Proxmox 7.x is based on Debian-Bullseye

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