These are the ratings I need to convert:
Machines SPECfp92 rating * ? = MIPS
---------- --------------- -----
cluster #1 121.1 ?
cluster #2 97.6 ?
cluster #3 134.6 ?
Thanks ahead of time.
--
UCS Stat/Math stat...@ucs.indiana.edu
UCS Center for Statistical and Mathematical Computing
618 E. Third Street Phone 855-4724
I'm wondering why you want to have MIPS. Specmarks are a much better measure
of system performance because they test a mixture of "real life" programs.
MIPS only measures sort of a maximum "naked" processor speed which is totally
useless in real life. See the hype about the Alpha: lots of MIPS, but at the
bottom line Alpha _systems_ aren't faster than IBMs or HPs.
I thought "MIPS" stood for "Meaningless Instructions Per Second" :-)
Since we will use RS/6000s, if our clients prefer, what RS/6000 compares
to the DEC ALPHA 3000/900 ?:
Key characteristics of the 3000/900:
CPU DECchip 21064
Clock Rate 275 MHz
SPECint92 189
SPECfp92 264
Memory 32 Mbytes to 1 Gbyte
Cache 2 Mbytes
Storage 2 Fast SCSI-2 controllers at 10 Mbytes per second
I/O Slots 6 TURBOchannel slots at 100 Mbytes per second
Graphics (T/C option) 8/24 plane; 3D 24 plane
Monitor 21 inch color
Thanks in advance,
--Gerald (Jerry) R. Leslie
Staff Engineer
Dynamic Matrix Control Corporation (my opinions are my own)
P.O. Box 721648 9896 Bissonnet
Houston, Texas 77272 Houston, Texas, 77036
713/272-5065 713/272-5200 (fax)
gle...@isvsrv.enet.dec.com
jle...@dmccorp.com
==============================================================================
BTW, DEC has announced faster versions of the AXP chips:
Alpha AXP 21164-300MHz : 330 SPECint92, 500 SPECfp92 (estimated)
Alpha AXP 21164-266MHz : 290 SPECint92, 440 SPECfp92 (estimated)
Should be something like the 590, at 120 SpecInt, 260 SpecFP, appr. 70 Mhz.
Floating point like the alpha, integer some 30% less. However, it is nearly
one year "old" now.
BTW, I don't look at _chips_, let's see their _systems_.
Since I'm sure you've been told about 1000 times by now, MIPS is no longer a
useful measure of system (or even CPU) performance. A CPU instruction can
mean so many different things from chip-to-chip that to measure how fast one
completes a given 'instruction' is a worthless measure of how fast the system
will operate on real world stuff.
But, in case you were wondering...
The CPU on an RS/6000 can complete multiple instructions per clock cycle.
The Power2 architecture can complete something like (up to) 4 instructions
per cycle. The PowerPC is similar, but may be less. The older RIOS (Power?)
architecture could complete (up to) 2 instructions per cycle. This all
depends on which instructions, and what they are attempting to do... So, to
calculate MIPS for a given CPU architecture, you would multiply the clock
speed by the (theoretical) average number of instructions completed per cycle
-- on some machines the clock runs at 80Mhz, on some it runs at 60Mhz (and on
others...) .
Please note the difference between "can complete" and "does complete"...
Real world use may show that only .5 instructions are being completed per
clock cycle -- depending on the application and supporting hardware.
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
*** These are my opinions... Mine! All Mine! Minemineminemineminemine! ***
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robin D. Wilson ro...@pencom.com Pencom Software
701 Canyon Bend Dr. 9050 Capital of Texas Hwy
Pflugerville, TX 78660 Austin, TX 78759
In article <356lu7...@usenet.pa.dec.com>, nei...@nestvx.enet.dec.com (Burkhard Neidecker-Lutz) writes:
|> In article <354oup$g...@rs18.hrz.th-darmstadt.de> kra...@rzri6f.gsi.de (Michael Kraemer) writes:
|> >|> Key characteristics of the 3000/900:
|> >|>
|> >|> SPECint92 189
|> >|> SPECfp92 264
|> >
|> >Should be something like the 590, at 120 SpecInt, 260 SpecFP, appr. 70 Mhz.
|> >Floating point like the alpha, integer some 30% less.
|>
|> Must be some new math:
|>
|> 189/120 = 1.575 or 57% better integer performance
|>
OK, if you like to argue with me on some silly numbers, that's how I did it:
1 - 121.6 / 189 = 1 - 0.64338624 = 0.35661376 = 35.661376%
I apologize for dropping 5.661376 % in favor of the IBM.
|> >BTW, I don't look at _chips_, let's see their _systems_.
|>
|> Which is fine for the 21164 numbers posted, but the 3000/900 decidedly is
|> a shipping system.
|>
Sure, but it doesn't look much greater than the IBM.
regards,
Michael
Must be some new math:
189/120 = 1.575 or 57% better integer performance
>BTW, I don't look at _chips_, let's see their _systems_.
Which is fine for the 21164 numbers posted, but the 3000/900 decidedly is
a shipping system.
Burkhard Neidecker-Lutz
GLASS Project, CEC Karlsruhe
Advanced Technology Group, Digital Equipment Corporation
nei...@nestvx.enet.dec.com
>Sure, but it doesn't look much greater than the IBM.
Mmh. The 590 costs $57,500, the 3000/900 $38,000. Faster and quite
a bit cheaper. But then it always has been somewhat more expensive
to buy IBM.
Burkhard Neidecker-Lutz
GLASS Project, CEC Karlsruhe
Advanced Technology Group, Digital Equipment Corporation
nei...@nestvx.enet.dec.com
"Alpha - The Next Generation: 21164-300, SPECint92 330, SPECfp92 500"
I don't think there is any way to fairly translate to any type of MIPS
measurement from just SPECfp, and people compute MIPS in a number of
differing fashions.
comp.arch and comp.benchmarks could give you a better idea of fairer
measures of system or processor performance.
--
+------All Views Expressed Are My Own And Not Necessarily Shared By IBM-----+
+ Ronald S. Woan (IBM VNET)WOAN AT AUSTIN, wo...@exeter.austin.ibm.com +
+ outside of IBM wo...@austin.ibm.com or wo...@cactus.org or r.w...@ieee.org +
+ other wo...@csua.berkeley.edu Prodigy: XTCR74A Compuserve: 73530,2537 +
All the same, wouldn't just be fun to have the MIPS numbers? Even though they
don't mean anything, the mainframers around here don't speak SEPC, and I doubt
the mainframe CPUs are rated on SPEC. If they are, I would be interested in
the SPEC measurements for the ES/9000 CPUs.
--
Reply-to: meaddata.com!cisdfl01!cis115
Tony Gast (606)344-4528x4667
Square D
UNIX Systems Administrator (Guy, dude, etc)
Wrong. Back in '90 DEC had the chuzpe to charge DM 37000,- (including
Xmas discount) for a VAX 3176 with 8MB memory + gfx. At that time a comparably
equipped (gfx+memory) IBM 6000/320 was around DM 40000,-, maybe less, but 2 - 2.5 times
more powerful.
In '91 our group purchased 320Hs and DECstations 5000/xxx (ULTRIX)
at very similar prices between 30000,- and 40000,- (don't remember exactly).
For most of our applications the IBMs still were about a factor 2 faster,
the DECs had lousy graphics and lousy compilers (the FORTRAN and C DEC sold us).
Compared to AIX, ULTRIX is junk.
So who is expensive then ?
DECs price/performance may have improved since then (market pressure),
but still it is not better than their competitors.
In fact, the tons of papers I get from
IBM, HP, DEC, ... show very similar ratios.
Assuming the DEC 3000/900 (and DEC 2100) are rather new systems (months old,
the IBM 590 is about a year old now, I guess),
lets await what IBM and HP have to offer
end of September. Another round in the price war ?
Michael
With more recent versions of AIX, agreed. With older versions of both,
they are both junk.
>So who is expensive then ?
IBM today.
>DECs price/performance may have improved since then (market pressure),
>but still it is not better than their competitors.
It is quite a bit better.
>In fact, the tons of papers I get from
>IBM, HP, DEC, ... show very similar ratios.
>Assuming the DEC 3000/900 (and DEC 2100) are rather new systems (months old,
>the IBM 590 is about a year old now, I guess),
August 94 and April 94, respectively.
>lets await what IBM and HP have to offer
>end of September. Another round in the price war ?
We'll see.
Burkhard Neidecker-Lutz
GLASS Project, CEC Karlsruhe
Advanced Technology Group, Digital Equipment Corporation
nei...@nestvx.enet.dec.com
"August 94: DEC 7000/700, SPECint 193.8, SPECfp 292.6, 275 Mhz 21064A
The Next Generation: 21164-300, 330 SPECint92, 500 SPECfp92"