Various open-source benchmarks by the Phoronix Test Suite v8.0.0 (Aremark).
Processor: AMD FX-8350 Eight-Core @ 4.00GHz (4 Cores / 8 Threads), Motherboard: ASRock 970A-G/3.1 (P1.20 BIOS), Chipset: AMD RD9x0/RX980, Memory: 12288MB, Disk: 250GB Samsung SSD 850, Graphics: NV137 4096MB, Audio: Realtek ALC1150, Monitor: T27, Network: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411
OS: Fedora 27, Kernel: 4.16.13-200.fc27.x86_64 (x86_64), Desktop: GNOME Shell 3.26.2, Display Server: Wayland, OpenGL: 4.3 Mesa 17.3.6, Compiler: GCC 7.3.1 20180303, File-System: ext4, Screen Resolution: 3840x1080
Compiler Notes: --build=x86_64-redhat-linux --disable-libunwind-exceptions --enable-__cxa_atexit --enable-bootstrap --enable-checking=release --enable-gnu-indirect-function --enable-gnu-unique-object --enable-initfini-array --enable-languages=c,c++,objc,obj-c++,fortran,ada,go,lto --enable-libmpx --enable-multilib --enable-offload-targets=nvptx-none --enable-plugin --enable-shared --enable-threads=posix --mandir=/usr/share/man --with-arch_32=i686 --with-gcc-major-version-only --with-isl --with-linker-hash-style=gnu --with-tune=generic --without-cuda-driver
Disk Notes: CFQ / data=ordered,relatime,rw,seclabel
Processor Notes: Scaling Governor: acpi-cpufreq ondemand
Python Notes: Python 2.7.15 + Python 3.6.5
Security Notes: SELinux + __user pointer sanitization + Full AMD retpoline IBPB + SSB disabled via prctl and seccomp Protection
This is a simple benchmark of SQLite. At present this test profile just measures the time to perform a pre-defined number of insertions on an indexed database. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
BlogBench is designed to replicate the load of a real-world busy file server by stressing the file-system with multiple threads of random reads, writes, and rewrites. The behavior is mimicked of that of a blog by creating blogs with content and pictures, modifying blog posts, adding comments to these blogs, and then reading the content of the blogs. All of these blogs generated are created locally with fake content and pictures. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test measures how long it takes to extract the .tar.xz Linux kernel package. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test performs an alignment of 100 pyruvate decarboxylase sequences. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a benchmark of BLAKE2 using the blake2s binary. BLAKE2 is a high-performance crypto alternative to MD5 and SHA-2/3. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This integer benchmark solves positions in the game of Connect-4, as played on a vertical 7x6 board. By default, it uses a 64Mb transposition table with the twobig replacement strategy. Positions are represented as 64-bit bitboards, and the hash function is computed using a single 64-bit modulo operation, giving 64-bit machines a slight edge. The alpha-beta searcher sorts moves dynamically based on the history heuristic. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test profile is a collection of Lua scripts/benchmarks run against a locally-built copy of LuaJIT upstream. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test runs the ANSI C version of SciMark 2.0, which is a benchmark for scientific and numerical computing developed by programmers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. This test is made up of Fast Foruier Transform, Jacobi Successive Over-relaxation, Monte Carlo, Sparse Matrix Multiply, and dense LU matrix factorization benchmarks. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
The Himeno benchmark is a linear solver of pressure Poisson using a point-Jacobi method. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a test of 7-Zip using p7zip with its integrated benchmark feature or upstream 7-Zip for the Windows x64 build. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a test of Stockfish, an advanced C++11 chess benchmark that can scale up to 128 CPU cores. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test times how long it takes to build PHP 5 with the Zend engine. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
AOBench is a lightweight ambient occlusion renderer, written in C. The test profile is using a size of 2048 x 2048. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test measures the time needed to archive/compress two copies of the Linux 4.13 kernel source tree using Gzip compression. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test times how long it takes to encode a sample WAV file to FLAC format five times. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a simple benchmark of PostgreSQL using pgbench. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test profile reports the total time of the different average timed test results from PyBench. PyBench reports average test times for different functions such as BuiltinFunctionCalls and NestedForLoops, with this total result providing a rough estimate as to Python's average performance on a given system. This test profile runs PyBench each time for 20 rounds. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
PHPBench is a benchmark suite for PHP. It performs a large number of simple tests in order to bench various aspects of the PHP interpreter. PHPBench can be used to compare hardware, operating systems, PHP versions, PHP accelerators and caches, compiler options, etc. The number of iterations used is 1,000,000. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This test measures the time needed to carry out some sample Git operations on an example, static repository that happens to be a copy of the GNOME GTK tool-kit repository. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a wrapper around the phoronix-test-suite debug-self-test sub-command for testing hot Phoronix Test Suite code paths and if wanting to compare different PHP implementations. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
Processor: AMD FX-8350 Eight-Core @ 4.00GHz (4 Cores / 8 Threads), Motherboard: ASRock 970A-G/3.1 (P1.20 BIOS), Chipset: AMD RD9x0/RX980, Memory: 12288MB, Disk: 250GB Samsung SSD 850, Graphics: NV137 4096MB, Audio: Realtek ALC1150, Monitor: T27, Network: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411
OS: Fedora 27, Kernel: 4.16.13-200.fc27.x86_64 (x86_64), Desktop: GNOME Shell 3.26.2, Display Server: Wayland, OpenGL: 4.3 Mesa 17.3.6, Compiler: GCC 7.3.1 20180303, File-System: ext4, Screen Resolution: 3840x1080
Compiler Notes: --build=x86_64-redhat-linux --disable-libunwind-exceptions --enable-__cxa_atexit --enable-bootstrap --enable-checking=release --enable-gnu-indirect-function --enable-gnu-unique-object --enable-initfini-array --enable-languages=c,c++,objc,obj-c++,fortran,ada,go,lto --enable-libmpx --enable-multilib --enable-offload-targets=nvptx-none --enable-plugin --enable-shared --enable-threads=posix --mandir=/usr/share/man --with-arch_32=i686 --with-gcc-major-version-only --with-isl --with-linker-hash-style=gnu --with-tune=generic --without-cuda-driver
Disk Notes: CFQ / data=ordered,relatime,rw,seclabel
Processor Notes: Scaling Governor: acpi-cpufreq ondemand
Python Notes: Python 2.7.15 + Python 3.6.5
Security Notes: SELinux + __user pointer sanitization + Full AMD retpoline IBPB + SSB disabled via prctl and seccomp Protection
Testing initiated at 11 June 2018 06:43 by user aw.