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From: Richard B. Gilbert on 8 Apr 2008 15:08 Andre van Eyssen wrote: > On 2008-04-07, Damon Getsman <dgetsman(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> I have recently installed Solaris 10 on a Sun Enterprise 3500 server >> system that was sitting unused in our hardware stores here. Primarily > > [snip] > >> If, indeed, the x86-64 architecture does seem to be the better >> solution, what kinds of server implementations would I see better >> performance from the sparc with 4 processors on? > > [snip] > > You'd need to use an x86 of similar vintage to the E3500 to compare the > architecture, really. The E3500 is an old machine indeed, despite having more > RAM than the average PC. A new x86 based machine will have a lot more CPU > power than the E3500, especially if it has the same number of CPUs. A quad > Opteron with 8Gb of RAM would kill it completely. On the other hand, a quad > Pentium Pro wouldn't get anywhere near the throughput of the E3500. > > It's not a reasonable comparison, but I will note that even the old E3500 will > still churn through a good amount of work, and the hardware is very reliable - > they tend to live on for a long time. > > If you do want to benchmark it, I'd suggest using one of the Oracle benchmarks > - they're a good workout for the system. Why not post the results back here? > Doesn't Oracle prohibit publication of such benchmarks? The last time I had any contact with Oracle was 2004 and, at that time, publishing benchmark results involving Oracle was prohibited. Check your contract with Oracle before you get into expensive legal trouble!!
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