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Oh, you have just not mentioned that it also needs to download 1GB of tests which will result in 2.7GB space needed! Since my microSD card does not have that much space available, I'm running testsuite from the NFS mounted directory -- hence all the sqlite & other disk based tests will be completely out of range of local disks...
Also it looks like all the tests needs to be compiled locally which means I'll need to wait a week or so for the results to come. I've just started this *beast*.
Karel
Thanks for your patience!
Yes it does require to download quite a bit of files. But I'm pretty sure these tests don't include any disk-specific benchmarks, so I don't think it will affect the results if you run them from an NFS share.
Wrt. to what CacheBench actually does, I've found this paper which actually seems to state that it measures compiler performance:
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/do ... p1&type=ps. But, of course, any executable will - to some extent - measure compiler performance, assuming it was compiled.
I didn't really pick out any specific tests for comparing these netbook-type devices, I don't know which tests would be most suitable. I just stumbled upon these benchmarks for a Pandaboard and an Atom-based netbook and though they would be good to put the i.MX53 platform up against.
Perhaps we should find some more suitable benchmarks?
There are plenty to choose from, but I'm not sure all will run on ARM.
When I get the new Smartbook, I'm considering running all the
test suites that seem relevant. Like CPU-, memory- and "Linux System"-tests. Some will fail, but the ones that do complete will create a page on OpenBenchmarking.org that contains only ARM-compatible benchmarks, that can be used to compare to other systems. It
would be good to find some tests that are as relevant as possible though, if that can be done. Some that reflect the overall speed that we experience a system to have.
This Java script test seems useful as well:
http://www.webkit.org/perf/sunspider/sunspider.html