java-app-processor-m5a.large
Processor: AMD EPYC 7571 (1 Core / 2 Threads), Motherboard: Amazon EC2 m5a.large (1.0 BIOS), Memory: 8192MB, Disk: 9GB Amazon Elastic Block Store
OS: CentOS Linux 7, Kernel: 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 (x86_64), Compiler: GCC 4.8.5 20150623, File-System: xfs, System Layer: KVM
Processor Notes: CPU Microcode: 0x8001227
Java Notes: OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_232-b09)
Security Notes: SELinux + l1tf: Not affected + meltdown: Not affected + spec_store_bypass: Vulnerable + spectre_v1: Mitigation of Load fences __user pointer sanitization + spectre_v2: Vulnerable: Retpoline without IBPB
This test runs the Java 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 benchmark 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.
Processor: AMD EPYC 7571 (1 Core / 2 Threads), Motherboard: Amazon EC2 m5a.large (1.0 BIOS), Memory: 8192MB, Disk: 9GB Amazon Elastic Block Store
OS: CentOS Linux 7, Kernel: 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 (x86_64), Compiler: GCC 4.8.5 20150623, File-System: xfs, System Layer: KVM
Processor Notes: CPU Microcode: 0x8001227
Java Notes: OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_232-b09)
Security Notes: SELinux + l1tf: Not affected + meltdown: Not affected + spec_store_bypass: Vulnerable + spectre_v1: Mitigation of Load fences __user pointer sanitization + spectre_v2: Vulnerable: Retpoline without IBPB
Testing initiated at 15 December 2019 01:54 by user root.