Originally posted by hax0r
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
AlmaLinux 9, openSUSE Leap 15.4, Ubuntu 22.04, Debian 11.3 & Clear Linux Benchmarks
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by hax0r View PostI'm 99% sure its due to the CPU scaling governor being set to "performance" on Alma.
The benchmarks overall are unfair, all distros should have been set their cpu freq scaling governors to "performance".
I think a better way to account for the CPU scaling governor issue is to:- Specify what each distro is using, at the top of the article. It's a detail on the same level as which gcc, glibc, and kernel version they're using.
- Perform a separate benchmark to see how much deficit can be recovered by simply changing it, if one of the lower-performing distros is using a lower-performing setting.
- Likes 4
Comment
-
Originally posted by coder View PostI agree with skeevy420 that it's better to test the default installation of these distros, as that's what most users will run.
I think a better way to account for the CPU scaling governor issue is to:- Specify what each distro is using, at the top of the article. It's a detail on the same level as which gcc, glibc, and kernel version they're using.
- Perform a separate benchmark to see how much deficit can be recovered by simply changing it, if one of the lower-performing distros is using a lower-performing setting.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by dekernel View PostopenSUSE might be the slowest in the group, but I will take it every day of the week. The reliability of it has been fantastic for me, but the ease of configuration with yast is a winner as well.
I have a dual boot Leap - Tumbleweed and I don't see any difference, but I'm sure there are.
I have also tried other distributions and I have never perceived big differences, perhaps they are more evident with some games or with high workloads, something that with the daily use of a PC for office and multimedia use is not so evident.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Charlie68 View PostKeep in mind that the benchmarks give an indicative value, which in daily use of the PC could be null.
I have a dual boot Leap - Tumbleweed and I don't see any difference, but I'm sure there are.
I have also tried other distributions and I have never perceived big differences, perhaps they are more evident with some games or with high workloads, something that with the daily use of a PC for office and multimedia use is not so evident.
Comment
-
Originally posted by skeevy420 View PostDon't kill the messenger.
The SVT numbers are interesting. Regardless of compile-time feature set, you'd expect the actual work to be done in runtime-chosen appropriate ASM, i.e. SSE4/SSSE3 or AVX, and that appears to not be the case.
The small deltas for most of the rest of the tests are likely a mixture of governor and/or trivial improvements from featureset, but not really large enough to be worth caring about.
Comment
-
Originally posted by coder View PostMaybe if you're spending a lot of time waiting for builds to complete, you might also have an interest in minimizing that.
When I suggested this might be a factor in why they were a year behind schedule and informed them I would be fixing it, one of the developers objected quite strenuously, because they'd all been using it as an excuse to screw around on the web etc... :P
Comment
Comment