To give you an idea of the scale of this benchmark we have graphs of stored procedures calls per second. We decided to focus on Stored Procedures / Second rather than Transactions / Second as the definition of a Transaction can have a business context or a technical context.



An interesting preview of the results to come: in 2-way configurations the Xeon is actually able to slightly outperform the Opteron. The added cache and 3.0GHz+ clock speed does seem to help the Xeon tremendously.



The Opteron goes from lagging slightly behind the Xeon to offering a 8.5% performance advantage in a 4-way configuration. The Xeon's shared FSB severely clips its wings when moving to a 4-way setup.

If you're familiar with these sort of database applications, the above graphs will give you a good idea of what sort of stress we're putting on these systems; we are pushing enterprise class performance limits. Now onto the results:

“Order Entry” Stress Test: Measuring Enterprise Class Performance Order Entry Stress Test Results
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  • Fraggster - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    intel=pwnd again :)
  • Jason Clark - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    64Bit tests are next on our agenda, once there is an Extended 64bit version of SQL Server.... :) We're looking into other avenues as well.

    Andreas, windows 2003 enterprise is what we used.
  • fukka - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    Would the Opterons gain any advantage using a 64bit OS (aka Linux) and a database that is much bigger than 4GB in size?

    That would be interesting to see, but I suppose the IA32e will address that advantage...
  • andreasl - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    Hey Anand have you thought about moving to Server 2003 instead of running 2000? And any chance of seeing 64-bit results anytime soon? (does a 64-bit version of your app even exist?)
  • christophergorge - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    Opteron only works with ECC registered memory. They only come up to DDR333.
  • raptor666 - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    Maybe because 4 way boards might not support it.

    Just a guess but honestly i'm not sure.

    Peter

  • tolgae - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    Stupid question probably but why didn't you use DDR400 on the Opteron?
  • CRAMITPAL - Tuesday, March 2, 2004 - link

    No surprises here... Anyone with a clue has known for a year that Opteron/A64 is a far superior architecture to anything Intel bulds, sells, or plans to produce in the next two years.

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