
For these interim benchmarks are some more data from the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X that I've done in my benchmarks since receiving this processor yesterday. Our Phoronix.com server is still a bit slow from all the traffic today, but at least OpenBenchmarking.org and all these links are off on a separate, more powerful server.
If you want to see how your own Linux system(s) compare to this new Linux box, simply install the Phoronix Test Suite and run phoronix-test-suite benchmark 1703021-RI-AMDRYZEN721 for some fun single and multi-threaded benchmarks to compare to for the Ryzen 7 1800X. More details via the result file. Some in the community have already compared their own systems to this data set. See this OpenBenchmarking.org merge for some interesting data compared to the community so far.
For those into deep/machine learning, this result file has Caffe AlexNet and Googlenet runs.
For those interested in HPC Challenge (HPCC), there are some Ryzen 7 HPC benchmarks in a standalone manner.
Here are some various compilation benchmarks.
Some more encoding benchmarks.
Searching Ryzen on OpenBenchmarking.org will also to continue to yield more data from I and other early Ryzen owners running benchmarks.
Stay tuned for more Ryzen Linux benchmarks shortly, including the much-anticipated gaming data. It looks like the Ryzen 7 1700 I ordered will be delivered on Friday.
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