Stable Linux kernel 2.6 for MPC8XX
David Jander
david.jander at protonic.nl
Tue Mar 14 18:50:46 EST 2006
On Friday 10 March 2006 16:33, Wolfgang Denk wrote:
> > I believe most of those observations and measurements are not valid
> > anymore. Kernel 2.6 for 8xx has come a long way since this article was
> > written. It might have been true back then, but it surely isn't anymore.
>
> So did you actually run any benchmarks? Specilations on what might be
> or should be are not really helpful.
Of course I did. Otherwise I wouldn't say this.
Here's some benchmark data from nbench (sorry didn't try lmbench yet):
The same ELDK (version 3.1.1) for both kernels, running on exactly the same
board (MPC852T 100MHz, with 32Mbyte SDRAM and 32Mbyte Flash running from NFS
root). I removed some FPU benchmarks, as they are pretty meaningless for this
board and take an ethernity otherwise.
Results for Kernel 2.4.25 (Denx CVS from around sept-oct or so, 2005):
TEST : Iterations/sec. : Old Index : New Index
: : Pentium 90* : AMD K6/233*
--------------------:------------------:-------------:------------
NUMERIC SORT : 30.438 : 0.78 : 0.26
STRING SORT : 1.5842 : 0.71 : 0.11
BITFIELD : 7.9506e+06 : 1.36 : 0.28
FP EMULATION : 3.258 : 1.56 : 0.36
IDEA : 108.89 : 1.67 : 0.49
HUFFMAN : 26.281 : 0.73 : 0.23
LU DECOMPOSITION : 0.32765 : 0.02 : 0.01
==========================ORIGINAL BYTEMARK RESULTS==========================
INTEGER INDEX : 1.052
FLOATING-POINT INDEX: 0.257
Now the results for 2.6.14 (Denx git released 2.6.14):
TEST : Iterations/sec. : Old Index : New Index
: : Pentium 90* : AMD K6/233*
--------------------:------------------:-------------:------------
NUMERIC SORT : 32.654 : 0.84 : 0.28
STRING SORT : 1.7408 : 0.78 : 0.12
BITFIELD : 8.3466e+06 : 1.43 : 0.30
FP EMULATION : 3.506 : 1.68 : 0.39
IDEA : 115.3 : 1.76 : 0.52
HUFFMAN : 27.855 : 0.77 : 0.25
LU DECOMPOSITION : 0.35932 : 0.02 : 0.01
==========================ORIGINAL BYTEMARK RESULTS==========================
INTEGER INDEX : 1.115
FLOATING-POINT INDEX: 0.265
I don't know why, but while everyone still says 2.6 is slower, I am
consistently getting results that seem to prove the opposite. Why?
Is the TLB/cache stuff better optimized for 8xx in 2.6?
IMHO it is quite a difference.
Btw, I also wrote different small "speed-measurement" tools (to measure
loop-speed, memory throughput for different block sizes, etc...) and they all
show aproximately the same increase.
I was careful to strip both kernels of all unnecessary drivers and features
that could hamper performance. If you wish I could try to dig up the .config
files for you, but I am not sure I'll find them anymore (I did this when
2.6.14 was just released).
Greetings,
--
David Jander
Protonic Holland.
More information about the Linuxppc-embedded
mailing list