Re: Ubuntu 32-bit, 32-bit PAE, 64-bit Kernel Benchmarks

From: Pedro Ribeiro
Date: Thu Dec 31 2009 - 12:49:56 EST


On Thu, Dec 31, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> Boaz Harrosh wrote:
>>
>> On 12/31/2009 04:49 AM, Bill Davidsen wrote:
>>>
>>> Yuhong Bao wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Given that Linus was once talking about the performance penalties of PAE
>>>> and HIGHMEM64G, perhaps you'd find these benchmarks done by Phoronix of
>>>> interest:
>>>> http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=ubuntu_32_pae
>>>>
>>> I find these tests mirror my own experience with PAE, the benefit of
>>> having the nx hardware enabled justifies the few percent drop in performance
>>> I was able to find.
>>>
>>> I find the huge gain in web service hard to believe without a hint why a
>>> 64 bit CPU would be 15x faster. The disk, memory, and network wouldn't be
>>> faster, and the CPU intensive tests weren't significantly faster, so unless
>>> the systems were tuned differently where's the gain? Same feeling about the
>>> TP test, an order of magnitude faster on a test running the same application
>>> on the same hardware is hard to buy without an explanation.
>>>
>>
>> Why? simple, Memory. This system must have lots of memory (see the
>> HIGHMEM64G) so
>> lots of IO must be bouncing on a 32bit system, where in 64bit it is
>> copy-less.
>>
> Did you miss the hardware configuration? It was run on a laptop with 4GB and
> two little laptop drives. And there was no serious difference between the
> non-PAE (sees 3GB) and PAE (sees 4GB) performance. Clearly there's little
> enough memory to address in any mode.
>
>> Just my guess, but I'm not surprised.
>>
> Eight thousand pages/sec out of a laptop with 5400 rpm drives doesn't
> surprise you? Even if every page were copied to somewhere else the speed of
> the disk and network are still 1000 times slower. I haven't found details on
> this "test" but I'm guessing that the pages are all in memory so the disk is
> only used once, maybe even the same page being read each time, and if the
> client is on the same machine the "network" is loopback. Not representative
> of much of anything in the general case, that.
>
>>> The only obvious source I can think of is running the test load at
>>> 100Mbit on
>>> one test and Gbit on another, because I saw an early network driver do
>>> just that
>>> in negotiations with a switch.
>>>
>
>
> --
> Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
>  "We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from
> the machinations of the wicked."  - from Slashdot
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The article doesn't mention if a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit userland
was used or a 64-bit kernel with 64-bit userland.

Is there any performance benefit in having the former?

Regards,
Pedro
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