Rendering Benchmarks

We include Mental Ray and Shake as a point of reference, although both applications are strictly 32-bit at this time. Mental Ray is further hindered by the fact that the version we have is not SMP-aware.

Mental Ray 3.3.3

You may be interested to see how some single CPU setups perform on the same test render here. Once again, we are running the same Maya benchmark file found in our other reviews. While Solaris allows us to run some Linux binaries with emulation, we could not get the license servers to install correctly, which made this a Linux-only portion of the test. We ran Mental Ray via Maya using the command below:

# maya_render_with_mr -file Benchmark_Mental.mb

Since Mental Ray cannot utilize all eight physical cores, this benchmark doesn't do the V40z a lot of justice. Nevertheless, you can see how a single core from an Opteron 875 stacks up against a single Opteron 250 from the previous two benchmarks.

Shake 3.5c

Apple develops a great digital effects package called Shake. We took the opportunity to run a benchmark script by Lindsay Adams, which you can download here. The benchmark script renders 10 frames under various effects using one or multiple CPUs. We sum the render times and display them below. The times recorded are the averages of three runs.

The command run for this benchmark is:

# shake -exec hardware_test_v01.shk -vv

Even though Shake seems to support all the processor cores, there is a scaling issue. This is just one case in many where having lots of slower processors might not be as efficient as having fewer faster processors instead.

Apache Benchmarks Compiling
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  • KristopherKubicki - Thursday, June 30, 2005 - link

    Ecmaster76: It wasn't my decision to remove the article, and I agree with your thoughts as well.

    Kristopher
  • mastashake57 - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    Let me tell you, we have the first generation v40z, and it's a total crusher in comparison to our Dell PowerEdge 6650s. Way to go SUN!

    Intel XEONs can't hold a candle to it...
  • Ecmaster76 - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    that should read:

    But if there are liability and/or other issues that might come from leaving it up, than I will just have to wait.



  • Ecmaster76 - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    KristopherKubicki

    I think everyone has read the PS3/360 article but me, its been linked on Ars and it was out long enough that someone at MS could have downloaded the whole thing.

    But if there a re liability and/or other issues that might come from leaving it up, than I will just have to wait.
  • Ahkorishaan - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    #11 Solaris 10 is on the graphs, he jsut forgot to add it to the chart.

    Hey guys in Anandtech, think we could grab a review of the new Sun Ultra 20 workstation? It looks pretty sweet.
  • prd00 - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    Without much pressure from Intel, Sun has been pretty free to do what they want with AMD's processors. Sun is even going a bit on the offensive with Intel trade-in programs. Even though both AMD and Sun have been through some hard times recently, Sun is a great ally for AMD for two reasons; first, Sun knows servers - this is a critical market for AMD. Second, Sun isn't afraid of Intel and doesn't have nearly the problems AMD does with their customers.

    HEhuehueh... that's the reason why Sun server is still the best AMD server out there. HP and IBM should learn from them on how to build a good Opteron server.Anyway, Cray implementation of Opteron is still unmatched.
  • themelon - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    One question, why the lack of apples to apples os comparison between the two systems? You talk about S10 for two pages yet you dont list it as being tested on the Dual Core machine. That and you do not use the same linux versions on the two machines.

    To me that makes this comparison a whole lot less usefull. Granted, the perf should not vary to much between SuSE 9 and 9.1 but to not include S10 in the Dual Core comparo seems kinda silly.
  • KristopherKubicki - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    Ecmaster76: Eh, something was messed up with the content management system. PS3 article is pulled for now because Anand is worried about MS tracing his anonymous insider.

    Kristopher
  • Ecmaster76 - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    Ah, rendering problems. Thats why this article isn't on the main page (2461, the console article is a dead link, and it occured to me that number was about three articles to high, easy guess).

    Shame on you for pulling stuff when you could just leave a little 'were working on it'.

    :p
  • Beenthere - Wednesday, June 29, 2005 - link

    FWIW,

    AMD doesn't have "problems with it's customers" at all. AMD has problems with Intel's illegal Biz practices which have prevented many AMD customers from selling AMD products. With any luck HP, Sony and a Helleva lot of other PC companies will finally put Intel execs in prison where they belong. And you can bet all the companies that have been blackmailed by Intel will be a LOT more interested in selling AMD products now that the shit has hit the fan and they can come out of hiding.

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