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Linux Benchmarks

All articles tagged with #linux benchmarks

technology1 month ago

Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition Delivers Notable HPC and Dev Gains

Phoronix’s complementary analysis finds the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition delivering meaningful gains across developer- and HPC-focused workloads on AM5: the geo-mean across 300+ benchmarks is about 10% faster than the 9950X/9950X3D, code compilation is ~7% quicker, HPC performance is around 12% faster overall with some workloads seeing larger gains (e.g., Fortran/CFD suites), and chess engines are about 23% faster (LCzero/Stockfish). At $899 it offers strong value for CI/CD, open‑source, and HPC workloads on an AM5 platform, though AVX-512-heavy tasks still favor the Ryzen 9 9000-series and competing options. An interactive benchmark viewer is provided for deeper analysis.

technology4 months ago

Panther Lake Linux Benchmarks Still Incoming as Phoronix Hopes for Data This Week

Phoronix says Linux benchmarks for Intel Panther Lake laptops and Arc B390 GPUs are still coming ahead of official availability. The author plans to publish preliminary Linux data by week’s end once hardware ships (he’s awaiting a Panther Lake laptop) after Windows reviews have already appeared, with ongoing retesting of other Linux systems.

technology2 years ago

"Unveiling the Power of Intel's Emerald Rapids: Linux Benchmarks and Performance Gains"

Phoronix has conducted independent testing of the flagship Intel Xeon Platinum 8592+ 64-core processors, comparing their performance to AMD EPYC Genoa(X) and Bergamo. The benchmarks showed that the Xeon Platinum 8592+ exceeded expectations, with meaningful performance improvements in various areas. The new processors offer up to four more cores, higher turbo frequencies, significantly higher DDR5 memory bandwidth, and a larger cache compared to the previous generation. The testing was done using Ubuntu 23.10 with the Linux 6.6 kernel, providing a fresh look at Intel and AMD Linux server performance. Further articles will explore topics such as DDR5-4800 vs. DDR5-5600 performance and AVX-512 optimization.