Final Words

What gave the Athlon MP its performance advantage was AMD’s short-pipeline, high IPC (Instructions Per Clock) architecture. What we saw at the beginning of the Athlon MP vs. Xeon matches back in 2001 was that AMD was trouncing Intel without even breaking a sweat. However, as the Xeon ramped up in clock speed, the performance gap and later the advantage began to shift towards Intel.

With the Opteron, we are seeing an even more devastating advantage for AMD because, this time around, AMD isn’t only relying on a higher IPC core to gain the upper hand. The Opteron’s on-die memory controller is one of the biggest assets that the CPU has in the server environment, and as you can see by the performance results we’ve shown here today, it is an asset that is more valuable than the Xeon’s Hyper-Threading.

The choice today is clear. In 2-way configurations, the Opteron is a much more powerful and capable web server than Intel’s Xeon. But the performance tests are nowhere near over. We’ve been playing around with AMD’s 4-way Opteron 848 machines for months now and are not far away from bringing you the first head-to-head comparison between the Opteron 848 and a 4-way Intel Xeon MP system. AMD has been praising their Opteron architecture for MP scalability, and soon, we’ll be putting their claims to the test.

The true test that remains, however, is a test comparing AMD’s Opteron to Intel’s Itanium 2. Intel was not very receptive to the idea of doing a head-to-head; not out of a fear of losing, but out of a desire not to lend AMD any credibility by showing that the Opteron is indeed a competitor to the Itanium 2. While we do believe that the Itanium 2 in its 128-way configurations is definitely out of the Opteron’s league, in the 2-way and 4-way configurations that we are interested in comparing, the two are absolutely competitors.

Whether Intel is looking to supply us with an Itanium 2 system or not, we will make that comparison. It seems that if these web server results are any early indication, AMD has more than enough credibility with the Opteron to at least step up to bat with the Itanium 2 pitching.

First Round K.O.
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  • Zuni - Friday, December 19, 2003 - link

    "That entirely depends on the application being tested, and the load on the server, and the memory on the server. If you're calling the same 10 files over and over again then they'll likely be cached. If you have a true application where someone hits a page and creates a 600 megabyte recordset"

    Sure I/O usage would depend on the type of web application being tested. However, most web applications feeding off a database backend would not pull 600 mb recordsets :) Pulling such record sets would be a fairly silly thing to do in most any circumstance. Our test was absolutely not hitting I/O on the webservers, the template cache is more than enough to hold the templates being tested. In fact as I'm writing this I pulled the disk time on one of Anands busiest web servers and its showing less than 1% of disk time :) If an application is well written, and the webserver has a decent amount of memory (most do) then I/O should not be a factor in a run of the mill application such as FuseTalk.

    "This smacks of rhetoric. ASP and ASP.NET are also 'very good reference points' as enterprise level application environments. "

    Not at all, although I can see how you could draw that conclusion. FuseTalk is currently being ported to .NET, once we have a stable working version or another app we deem worthy of a real world test we’d be glad to run tests on .NET as well. I quite like the platform. This is just the beginning of our server testing and developing real world tests. It takes time, and a lot of it to develop and run theses tests.

    Cheers
  • Zuni - Friday, December 19, 2003 - link

    Trog, again RAMDISK was used so that the application server was free to tax the cpus as much as possible instead of waiting for data requests from the database. This has nothing to do with normal or abnormal. We aren’t testing the database here we’re testing the application server, and we wanted no bottlenecks on the backend to cause any skewing on the front end. We don’t have fibre channel backend database hardware just laying around, thus a RAMDISK was used to remove the I/O bottleneck.

    Again, the database is not in question here or being tested so its irrelevant.

    Cheers.
  • Falco. - Friday, December 19, 2003 - link

    " 1) disk subsystem is irrelevant in a web application driven by a database backend. Most any web application server caches the templates in memory so I/O is not a factor. However, each web machine had a 36gb u320 scsi drive. "

    That entirely depends on the application being tested, and the load on the server, and the memory on the server. If you're calling the same 10 files over and over again then they'll likely be cached. If you have a true application where someone hits a page and creates a 600 megabyte recordset, your disk IO is gonna come in handy right quick. Saying "I/O is not a factor" is misleading.

    However, I'm glad they responed the way they did, because if you hvae a testbed that starts to swap or spin out to disk, that doesn't test the CPU as much. I was expecting they'd come back and say they used a test set that was cached compiled templates (which is a good thing). My question was aimed at eliminating it as a possible variable.


    " 2) Not sure I understand your friends point really... Of course ColdFusion tests performance, we used FuseTalk as the web application and ColdFusion as the web application server. "

    That's not entirely what I meant. Cold Fusion is a middleware layer. It's not a "web server" as per the title of the review (Cold Fusion actually can include its own webserver if you want it to).

    I found the title of the review to be somewhat misleading, since it implied they were testing a web server and not an application server.


    " ColdFusion in its current version is a J2EE server which allows you to write in the ColdFusion language. After its compiled its the same compiled byte code as any J2EE app. "

    Correct; it's an interpreter (CF) running on an interpreted language (Java). It's a good test in that it has multiple subsystems communicating together on top of having to handle actual web serving such as setting up sessions and opening and closing connections.



    " We may include .NET in the future, but J2EE is a very good reference point as its a enterprise level application environment. "

    This smacks of rhetoric. ASP and ASP.NET are also 'very good reference points' as enterprise level application environments. A whole huge great pile of systems run ASP. It struck me that it would have been worthwhile to round out the review by testing a number of common web application server configurations:

    * Pure J2EE
    * ColdFusion
    * ASP
    * ASP.NET
    * PHP (although this would not test IIS, as most PHP systems drive it with Apache -- mind you, a test with Apache would be equally interesting)


    " Sustained load throughout the test keeping the CPU working in the 80-100% bracket. We measure performance by how long the cpu took to run each code template from start to end. (this was all detailed in the review btw.) "

    This part I understood and took for granted. Interestingly if they had sustained 80-100% CPU load, this is an added shine for the AMD parts, because past 70% load on your webserver you should be adding another box or upgrading your CPUs.
  • TrogdorJW - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    Hey Zuni... who are you? Anand? Or "just" an Anandtech employee (or reviewer or whatever)? Anyway, let me clarify:

    "The entire reason we used a RAMDISK was to ISOLATE the cpu not to hold it back by something else."

    Exactly. Ergo, without the RAMDISK holding the database, file I/O can be a much bigger factor than CPU speed. Yes, you can get bigger and faster disk subsystems, but that's not always the way it's done. Anyway, it *sounds* to me like a more "normal" setup on the database side would end up being a major bottleneck on the overall throughput, so that either of these systems is overkill. You need a DB system with a very high I/O rate first, and then looking at these faster CPUs comes second.

    On a separate thought, are there going to be some benchmarks *without* using a separate DB server (which used a RAMDISK)? I understand that your site may not run that way, but the vast majority of web servers do, I believe. If you have one server running both the database backend as well as the application services, what do the benchmarks look like? That would be something to look at, surely?
  • Falco. - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    thanks Zuni, i'll let him know and post back any replies he may have
  • Zuni - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    Falco,

    1) disk subsystem is irrelevant in a web application driven by a database backend. Most any web application server caches the templates in memory so I/O is not a factor. However, each web machine had a 36gb u320 scsi drive.

    2) Not sure I understand your friends point really... Of course ColdFusion tests performance, we used FuseTalk as the web application and ColdFusion as the web application server. ColdFusion in its current version is a J2EE server which allows you to write in the ColdFusion language. After its compiled its the same compiled byte code as any J2EE app. We may include .NET in the future, but J2EE is a very good reference point as its a enterprise level application environment.

    3) Sustained load throughout the test keeping the CPU working in the 80-100% bracket. We measure performance by how long the cpu took to run each code template from start to end. (this was all detailed in the review btw.)
  • Falco. - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    a friend has some questions about this review :

    Did they get into details about the disk subsystems on each of the web servers? I know they tried to keep the database in ramdisk (even though SQL server will do that anyway if the database is small enough).

    What sort of web application were they running? I find it curious they were using a Coldfusion application as well, since that doesn't test web response as much as the cold fusion runtime services; they should have used an ASP or ASP.NET application test, at least as an additional data point.

    What did they do to test web response time? Sustained load? stressed load? burst load?

    thats what hes asking in a forum i frequent...
  • Icewind - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    Man, how the hell do you learn and keep up with all this server technology, both hardware and software? Im having a hardtime just keeping desktop technology and changes....
  • Zuni - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    skiboysteve, because thats what was sent with the systems :) 8GB of it.
  • Zuni - Thursday, December 18, 2003 - link

    Visual, the db server didnt need hardly any ram the database was barely 50 MB :) Again the point of the article was to eliminate the db as anything but a boundless data resorce so the web applications servers could process pages as fast as possible, keeping the cpu taxed. This was a 32 bit test, OS etc. We're trying to get ahold of a 64 JVM and we're looking at some UNIX based 64 bit tests for another article.

    Cheers!

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