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CentOS Linux release 6.0 Final


OpenBenchmarking.org Results

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Global Results

antonio - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Fedora release 12, Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Celeron 900, Intel Mobile 4 IGP, Acer BA50-MV, Intel Atom N270, Intel Mobile 945GME IGP, SAMSUNG NC10, Intel Core i7-2600K, NVIDIA GF104, Intel DZ68BC

cputest - Tests on Fedora release 11, Intel Core 2 Duo P8400, VMware Abstract SVGA II, VMware VMware Virtual

cputest - Tests on Fedora release 11, Intel Core 2 Duo P8400, VMware Abstract SVGA II, VMware VMware Virtual

anon-29957-22120-13651 - Tests on Fedora release 14, Intel Core 2 Duo E8200, S3 Chrome 500, Gigabyte . P35-DS3L

antonio - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Fedora release 12, Intel Celeron 900, Intel Mobile 4 IGP, Acer BA50-MV, Intel Atom N270, Intel Mobile 945GME IGP, SAMSUNG NC10

cputest1 - Tests on Fedora release 14, Intel Core i7 Q 740, VMware SVGA II, VMware VMware Virtual

anon-29521-13519-27443 - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Pentium 4 2.60GHz, Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe

anon-26976-31631-30478 - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Pentium 4 2.60GHz, Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe

anon-21016-1343-14976 - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Pentium 4 2.60GHz, Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe

anon-10284-22591-4230 - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Pentium 4 2.60GHz, Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe

game1 - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Core i5-2500, Intel 2nd Generation Core Family IGP

iozone-512MB-read - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Core i5-2400, Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe

maxiimus - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Fedora release 12, NVIDIA C68, Intel Atom N270, Intel Mobile 945GME IGP, SAMSUNG NC10

BWidth - Tests on Fedora release 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 460, ASUS P8P67 DELUXE

Phoronix Information

Mageia 2 On Approach, Rocks 6.0 Released: In some more non-Ubuntu news this week, the release candidate for Mageia 2 is now available. Rocks 5.5 and Rocks 6.0 was also released...

Wow, CentOS 6.2 Is Now Available: While the CentOS crew was very late at releasing CentOS 6.0 as their community spin of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0, and also late at releasing CentOS 6.1 compared to upstream RHEL 6.1 and the other community EL derivatives, they have improved their turnaround time for the 6.2 release.

CentOS vs. Oracle vs. Scientific Linux 6.1 Performance: While CentOS, Scientific Linux, and Oracle Linux Server are all derived from the same upstream source (Red Hat Enterprise Linux), how does the system performance compare between these RHEL derivatives? Here are some benchmarks of each of the 6.1 releases for Oracle Server, CentOS, and Scientific Linux, as they all do not perform the same.

CentOS 6.1 Finally Released, Still Playing Catch-Up: CentOS 6.0 was released this past summer over 240 days after the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0, for which the Linux operating system is based. Released yesterday evening was CentOS 6.1, which this time is only belated by 204 days compared to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1...

At Long Last, CentOS 6.0 ISOs Finally Surface: Since the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0, 242 days have passed. Additionally, 129 days have passed since the release of Scientific Linux 6.0, which is one of the popular community rebuilds of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0 source packages. Only today, however, is CentOS 6.0 ISOs beginning to surface...

Scientific Linux Marches On While CentOS 6 Is Still M.I.A.: Red Hat released Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0 in November after it was available as beta for months prior. It took a few months for the Scientific Linux developers to release Scientific Linux 6.0, as their community rebuild of the RHEL6.0 packages, and shortly thereafter Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 was released.

Final Linux Benchmarks Of Project Dirndl: To much dismay, the major open-source announcement we have been waiting for, did not happen this week. Yes, this is the major open-source announcement that we have codenamed Dirndl. It is really that deserving of such a fitting codename. As our early tests have shown, it can dramatically speed-up the system's performance in computationally intensive workloads.

CentOS 5.6 Released; CentOS 6.0 Still M.I.A.: In mid-January was when Red Hat made the RHEL 5.6 GA release, but now three months later the CentOS 5.6 community rebuild of RHEL 5.6 is finally available. CentOS 6.0 though is still missing in action...

CentOS 5.5 Finally Released: A month and a half has passed since the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5, but CentOS 5.5 has finally made it out into the world as the community equivalent to the RHEL5.5 packages. CentOS 5.5 is available for i386 and x86_64 systems and there continues to be LiveCDs of it for those interested...

CentOS LiveCD 5.0: CentOS, the popular community Linux distribution based upon Red Hat Enterprise Linux, has been at version 5.0 since April of this year, but joining the CentOS 5.0 fleet today is the LiveCD. The CentOS 5.0 LiveCD is based upon CentOS 5.0 i386 and can work out to be a modest Linux workstation or recovery distribution.

CentOS 4.5 Released: CentOS 5.0 was released last month but for those not immediately upgrading, CentOS 4.5 is now available as an update in the CentOS 4.x branch. This release corresponds with the fifth update for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5. Some of the CentOS 4.5 features include a Xen virtualized kernel and a technology preview of OpenOffice.org 2.0.

CentOS 5.0 Released: If Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 is too expensive for your blood, CentOS 5 is now available. CentOS 5 is immediately available for i386 and x86_64 though PowerPC, IA64, and SPARC support is planned for the future. The release announcement is available here. One of the changes for CentOS 5.0 is being completely rebuilt using a newer build system.