Benchmark Methods and Systems

It is impossible to perform the same benchmark methodology as we use with dual socket servers. We limit ourselves to our virtualization benchmarking as we are sure these tests are able to saturate 24 cores. To add some perspective, we add industry standard benchmarks such as SAP and VMware VMmark scores.

Benchmark configuration

None of our benchmarks required more than 20GB RAM. Database files were placed on a three drive RAID0 Intel X25-E SLC 32GB SSD, with log files on one Intel X25-E SLC 32GB. Adding more drives improved performance by only 1%, so we are confident that storage is not our bottleneck.

Xeon Server 1: ASUS RS700-E6/RS4 barebone
Dual Intel Xeon "Gainestown" X5570 2.93GHz
ASUS Z8PS-D12-1U
6x4GB (24GB) ECC Registered DDR3-1333
NIC: Intel 82574L PCI-EGBit LAN
PSU: Delta Electronics DPS-770 AB 770W

Xeon Server 2: Supermicro SC818TQ-1000 Chassis
2x - 4x Intel Xeon X7460 at 2.66GHz
Supermicro X7QCE
64GB (16x4GB) ATP Registered FBDIMM DDR2-667 CL 5 ECC
NIC: Dual Intel PRO/1000 Server NIC
PSU: Supermicro 1000W w/PFC (Model PWS-1K01-1R)

Opteron Server 1 (Quad CPU): Supermicro 818TQ+ 1000
Quad AMD Opteron 8435 at 2.6GHz
Quad AMD Opteron 8389 at 2.9GHz
Supermicro H8QMi-2+
64GB (16x4GB) DDR2-800
NIC: Dual Intel PRO/1000 Server NIC
PSU: Supermicro 1000W w/PFC (Model PWS-1K01-1R)

Opteron Server 2 (Dual CPU): Supermicro A+ Server 1021M-UR+V
Dual Opteron 2435 "Istanbul" 2.6GHz
Dual Opteron 2389 2.9GHz
Supermicro H8DMU+,
32GB (8x4GB) 800MHz
PSU: 650W Cold Watt HE Power Solutions CWA2-0650-10-SM01-1

vApus/DVD Store/Oracle Calling Circle Client Configuration
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4GHz
Foxconn P35AX-S
4GB (2x2GB) Kingston DDR2-667
NIC: Intel PRO/1000

What Intel and AMD Are Offering Decision Support Benchmark
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  • Photubias - Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - link

    This is surely to be tested, but the Fiorano platform (as this AMD Chipset is called), is yet to be released.
  • solori - Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - link

    Fiorano (SR5690/SP5100, et al) are out now for Socket-F and really require an Istanbul to show their stuff (like IOV, etc). With a minor tweak on HT bus speeds, don't expect to see much improvement in memory bandwidth for Fiorano/Socket-F pairings. Where you should see improvement is in power consumption - pairing HE/EE Istanbul parts with Fiorano/Kroner should create a better performance/watt result in virtualization.

    Collin C. MacMillan
    http://blog.solori.net">http://blog.solori.net
  • bpdski - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    It is pretty amazing how fast the new 55xx chips are. Personally, I am holding out on any new server purchases and deployments until the EX systems come out next year. I am pretty excited about the performance potential of a dual or quad octal-core system. I feel for AMD, but if the EX systems scale as well as they should, they are really going to crush the Opterons.
  • duploxxx - Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - link

    2 answers to that, first off all looking at the design EX will be way more expensive creating a gap between 2 socket-4 socket platform even when only deploying 2 octa will be a very expensive baseline due to the motherboard layout. To expensive actually and a lot of focus trying to get risc/sparc marketshare.

    Second don't you think AMD knows this? The c32 G34 platform launch is much closer then people think, AMD made a clear roadmap and since 45nm all looks like going well on shape, keep in mind the cpu for the new platform is almost ready since it is based on istanbul and the new platform chipset was also released few weeks ago for the socket F platform, you will also see much more OEM activity with this platform due to one brand supplier, no longer need of the old nvidia/broadcom.

    EX was delayed-delayed-delayed if it continues like this it will be launched more or less at the same time, so keep the feeling. BTW even if the 55xx sereis would be again a bad performing server part (which it is finally not thank you intel) 75% of the market would be still buying it just for the brand name.....:)
  • cosminliteanu - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    Many thanks for this article !
    :)
  • BrightCandle - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    A dual socket will easily fit in a 1U. But 1.25A is some serious extra cost within a colo.

    The 2U quad sockets on the other hand are a busting 500W+, again serious extra money in a colo.

    The Colo's want you using 0.5A per 1U, there is a major mismatch from these machines to the reality of the power you can actually get. Love the speed, not liking the cost of running them.
  • sonicdeth - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    Thanks for this. Personally I can't recommend any of the quad socket systems until we see Intels Nehalem-EX early next year. The dual core 55xx series is just fantastic for the price (especially with VMware). We've deployed several HP 380G6's and couldn't be happier.
  • Bazili - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    Great article. Congrats!!!

    Could you pleas include a software price analysis? I guess it can show huge differences among a 24 core box and a 8 core box.


  • tobrien - Tuesday, October 6, 2009 - link

    these are amazing articles, you guys do such an awesome job with these.

    thanks a ton!
  • JohanAnandtech - Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - link

    Thanks for the kudos! much appreciated :-)

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