SQL Stress Results

The SQL Stress results have changed somewhat from some of our earlier articles using this tool. We did a revamp of the tool itself, which is more performant on high volume queries. Also, we lengthened the test time to 20 minutes and changed the queries around some to reflect our current FuseTalk version. The new 2MB L2 Xeon part did quite well here, churning out a 7% gain over its 1MB counterpart. The Opteron 252 gained its usual 7% for its clock increase of 200MHz. There was no gain from the 1GHz HT link support as we discussed in our Test Hardware configuration on Page 2. Overall, the new Xeon 2MB part was the "hands down" winner for this test with a 13% lead over the Opteron 252, thanks to its 1MB cache boost.

Total queries executed

The number of queries that were executed throughout the duration of the test.

Queries per second

An average of how many queries per second were executed throughout the duration of the test.

SQL Stress Tool

SQL Stress Tool


SQL Stress Tool Benchmark "Order Entry" Stress Test: Measuring Enterprise Class Performance
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  • bob661 - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    #14
    The difference is the 2xx can go up to 2 CPU's and the 8xx can go up to 8 CPU's. That's it.
  • Ross Whitehead - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    R3MF, we plan to discuss w/ AMD and Tyan the lack of benefit the 1 GHz HyperTransport provided.
  • Jason Clark - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    ceefka, meager? 3 of the most popular uses of a database? If there is something you think we are missing, please reveal ;).

    We'll work on a web article asap.
  • ksherman - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    is it just me, or did you take the best Xeon and put it against a mid range Opteron? what about the 8xx series? what is the difference between 2xx and 8xx?
  • blackbrrd - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    Seems Intel just turned the table again. What about webserver performance?
  • blckgrffn - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    I meant on the desktop, which is why the PM doesn't really count, sorry I wasn't more clear on that...
  • blckgrffn - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    I hope that the upcoming prescotts with 2meg L2 cache show similar improvements across the board - not because I am Intel fan, but really AMD hasn't had much in the way of direct competition from Intel lately (the PM doesn't count)

    Every benchmark has been: The 3000+ AMD64 is better than nearly any P4 for gaming performance, and if you really want to win all the benches but one or two, shell out for the fx-55... kind of boring, really :)
  • ceefka - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    However meager the benchies, it proofs my point that a company should mix and match according to their needs and not just stick with one or the other because their supplier says they shoud buy this or that.

    We have lots of financial data and scans, tables etc. going here, so a 4-way Opteron can be justified to sit between a few Xeon boxes for other apps. Unfortunately we're in the Intel comfort zone and browsing through accounts, scans and tables is therefore tedious.
  • R3MF - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    just because i'm awkward -

    i'd like to see a comparison between a:
    > FX55 (2.6GHz) & O252 (2.6GHz)
    > nF4 Ultra & nF4 Pro (abit wln8+)
    > 2x 512MB DDR500
    > 2x 300GB Max10 NCQ
    > 6800 Ultra

    in order to see whether the core enhancements in the new Opteron make a difference........?

    am i asking for too much? :p
  • gordon151 - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    Yeah, this article needs to be re-written because the Opteron doesn't crush Xeon. These numbers are dubious!

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