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Windows 10 WSL: Ubuntu vs. openSUSE Leap Performance
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Originally posted by m132 View PostWhat about native Windows binaries vs Linux under WSL tests? Will there be any?
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What about native Windows binaries vs Linux under WSL tests? Will there be any?
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Originally posted by coder View PostWow... Why is OpenSuSE so bad? Does this match up with known performance discrepencies between those GCC revisions?
To the extent that it's affected by Skylake-X weirdness, I wonder if any scheduler improvements made it into the 42.3 kernel that will help.
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Arch has a WSL support I think? Would be nice if it gets official support on the store too, see how a rolling distro compares
Curious if Clear Linux would also have an advantage in WSL like it did with your Docker tests, no idea if this has any WSL support though.
I don't know much about WSL, the I/O comments were indicating Linux FS was writing on top of Windows FS like a VM image file? Is it possible to assign a raw partition/disk or 10Gbps ethernet network share to get better performance? If network share is an option, you could also run Windows as a para-virtualized machine with an internal network(connect to host network share from guest), with network setup right using virtio and the like that'd perform pretty well.
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Wow... Why is OpenSuSE so bad? Does this match up with known performance discrepencies between those GCC revisions?
To the extent that it's affected by Skylake-X weirdness, I wonder if any scheduler improvements made it into the 42.3 kernel that will help.
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Originally posted by hsiktas View PostWhen I compile something in WSL I noticed that it is very slow and MSMPEng.exe was using multiple CPU cores. This is even more noticeable with JavaScript apps due do huge npm tasks where tons of small files are involved.
Can you compare your benchmarks with
1. adding WSL's filesystem into Windows Defender's exclusion list
2. completely disabling Windows Defender
I would guess that WSL's performance will stay crippled for these tasks until their antivirus team starts improving its on-demand scanning performance (or just start to ignore WSL's pico processes).Originally posted by hsiktas View PostWhen I compile something in WSL I noticed that it is very slow and MSMPEng.exe was using multiple CPU cores. This is even more noticeable with JavaScript apps due do huge npm tasks where tons of small files are involved.
Can you compare your benchmarks with
1. adding WSL's filesystem into Windows Defender's exclusion list
2. completely disabling Windows Defender
I would guess that WSL's performance will stay crippled for these tasks until their antivirus team starts improving its on-demand scanning performance (or just start to ignore WSL's pico processes).
- Likes 2
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When I compile something in WSL I noticed that it is very slow and MSMPEng.exe was using multiple CPU cores. This is even more noticeable with JavaScript apps due do huge npm tasks where tons of small files are involved.
Can you compare your benchmarks with
1. adding WSL's filesystem into Windows Defender's exclusion list
2. completely disabling Windows Defender
I would guess that WSL's performance will stay crippled for these tasks until their antivirus team starts improving its on-demand scanning performance (or just start to ignore WSL's pico processes).
Leave a comment:
-
Windows 10 WSL: Ubuntu vs. openSUSE Leap Performance
Phoronix: Windows 10 WSL: Ubuntu vs. openSUSE Leap Performance
Following my recent Windows 10 WSL CPU scaling benchmarks to see how well Microsoft's Windows Subsystem for Linux for running native Linux binaries compared to various distributions, I did a comparison of Ubuntu and openSUSE on WSL compared to running these distributions bare metal.
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