2 x Intel Xeon Silver 4114 testing with a Supermicro X11DPH-T v1.10 (2.1 BIOS) and ASPEED Family on Ubuntu 18.04 via the Phoronix Test Suite.
Processor: 2 x Intel Xeon Silver 4114 @ 2.20GHz (20 Cores / 40 Threads), Motherboard: Supermicro X11DPH-T v1.10 (2.1 BIOS), Chipset: Intel Sky Lake-E DMI3 Registers, Memory: 12 x 16384 MB DDR4-2400MT/s 18ASF2G72PDZ-2G6E1, Disk: 2000GB INTEL SSDPEDKE020T7 + 24 x 12000GB Seagate ST12000NM0027 + 2 x 240GB INTEL SSDSC2KG24, Graphics: ASPEED Family, Network: 2 x Intel X722 for 10GBASE-T
OS: Ubuntu 18.04, Kernel: 4.15.0-45-generic (x86_64), Compiler: GCC 7.3.0, File-System: zfs, Screen Resolution: 1024x768
Compiler Notes: --build=x86_64-linux-gnu --disable-vtable-verify --disable-werror --enable-checking=release --enable-clocale=gnu --enable-default-pie --enable-gnu-unique-object --enable-languages=c,ada,c++,go,brig,d,fortran,objc,obj-c++ --enable-libmpx --enable-libstdcxx-debug --enable-libstdcxx-time=yes --enable-multiarch --enable-multilib --enable-nls --enable-objc-gc=auto --enable-offload-targets=nvptx-none --enable-plugin --enable-shared --enable-threads=posix --host=x86_64-linux-gnu --program-prefix=x86_64-linux-gnu- --target=x86_64-linux-gnu --with-abi=m64 --with-arch-32=i686 --with-default-libstdcxx-abi=new --with-gcc-major-version-only --with-multilib-list=m32,m64,mx32 --with-target-system-zlib --with-tune=generic --without-cuda-driver -v
Processor Notes: Scaling Governor: acpi-cpufreq ondemand
Disk Scheduler Notes: NONE
Python Notes: Python 2.7.15rc1 + Python 3.6.7
Security Notes: KPTI + __user pointer sanitization + Full generic retpoline IBPB IBRS_FW + SSB disabled via prctl and seccomp + PTE Inversion; VMX: conditional cache flushes SMT vulnerable
Compilebench tries to age a filesystem by simulating some of the disk IO common in creating, compiling, patching, stating and reading kernel trees. It indirectly measures how well filesystems can maintain directory locality as the disk fills up and directories age. This current test is setup to use the makej mode with 10 initial directories 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.
Compilebench tries to age a filesystem by simulating some of the disk IO common in creating, compiling, patching, stating and reading kernel trees. It indirectly measures how well filesystems can maintain directory locality as the disk fills up and directories age. This current test is setup to use the makej mode with 10 initial directories Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
Tiotester (Threaded I/O Tester) benchmarks the hard disk drive / file-system performance. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
Dbench is a benchmark designed by the Samba project as a free alternative to netbench, but dbench contains only file-system calls for testing the disk performance. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
FS_Mark is designed to test a system's file-system performance. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a test of NetApp's PostMark benchmark designed to simulate small-file testing similar to the tasks endured by web and mail servers. This test profile will set PostMark to perform 25,000 transactions with 500 files simultaneously with the file sizes ranging between 5 and 512 kilobytes. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
This is a test of ab, which is the Apache benchmark program. This test profile measures how many requests per second a given system can sustain when carrying out 1,000,000 requests with 100 requests being carried out concurrently. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
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.
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.
AIO-Stress is an a-synchronous I/O benchmark created by SuSE. Current this profile uses a 2048MB test file and a 64KB record size. Learn more via the OpenBenchmarking.org test page.
Processor: 2 x Intel Xeon Silver 4114 @ 2.20GHz (20 Cores / 40 Threads), Motherboard: Supermicro X11DPH-T v1.10 (2.1 BIOS), Chipset: Intel Sky Lake-E DMI3 Registers, Memory: 12 x 16384 MB DDR4-2400MT/s 18ASF2G72PDZ-2G6E1, Disk: 2000GB INTEL SSDPEDKE020T7 + 24 x 12000GB Seagate ST12000NM0027 + 2 x 240GB INTEL SSDSC2KG24, Graphics: ASPEED Family, Network: 2 x Intel X722 for 10GBASE-T
OS: Ubuntu 18.04, Kernel: 4.15.0-45-generic (x86_64), Compiler: GCC 7.3.0, File-System: zfs, Screen Resolution: 1024x768
Compiler Notes: --build=x86_64-linux-gnu --disable-vtable-verify --disable-werror --enable-checking=release --enable-clocale=gnu --enable-default-pie --enable-gnu-unique-object --enable-languages=c,ada,c++,go,brig,d,fortran,objc,obj-c++ --enable-libmpx --enable-libstdcxx-debug --enable-libstdcxx-time=yes --enable-multiarch --enable-multilib --enable-nls --enable-objc-gc=auto --enable-offload-targets=nvptx-none --enable-plugin --enable-shared --enable-threads=posix --host=x86_64-linux-gnu --program-prefix=x86_64-linux-gnu- --target=x86_64-linux-gnu --with-abi=m64 --with-arch-32=i686 --with-default-libstdcxx-abi=new --with-gcc-major-version-only --with-multilib-list=m32,m64,mx32 --with-target-system-zlib --with-tune=generic --without-cuda-driver -v
Processor Notes: Scaling Governor: acpi-cpufreq ondemand
Disk Scheduler Notes: NONE
Python Notes: Python 2.7.15rc1 + Python 3.6.7
Security Notes: KPTI + __user pointer sanitization + Full generic retpoline IBPB IBRS_FW + SSB disabled via prctl and seccomp + PTE Inversion; VMX: conditional cache flushes SMT vulnerable
Testing initiated at 16 February 2019 17:40 by user root.