Hugo Silva wrote:

Today I decided to benchmark MySQL 5 performance on FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE.
This server is a Dual Xeon 2.8GHz, 4GB of RAM and 2x73GB SCSI disks that do 320MB/s

For all the tests, I restarted mysqld prior to starting the test, waited for about 1 minute for it to settle down, and ran super smack. For the consecutive runs, I executed super-smack right after the previous run ended.

Switching from HTT to no HTT was achieved by machdep.hyperthreading_allowed, and switching from/to libpthread/libthr was done via libmap.conf.

System:

FreeBSD ?? 6.1-STABLE FreeBSD 6.1-STABLE #3: Mon Jul 3 03:10:35 UTC 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/DATABASE i386

Here are the results:


MySQL 5.0.22, built with BUILD_OPTIMIZED=yes and WITH_PROC_SCOPE_PTH=yes


=== 4BSD + libthr + HTT on ===

Run #1
connect: max=4ms  min=1ms avg= 3ms from 10 clients
Query_type      num_queries     max_time        min_time        q_per_s
select_index    200000      0           0           20405.86


I think that this, does show impressive scaling to actually see performance increase with HTT enabled, from what I have seen on benchmarks on many hardware sites testing on MS Windows is that on the average best you get is an extra 5% performance out of HTT per core. I don't have any quad core machines either, but my dual CPU Dells that are around 3.[46]ghz get score of around 25,000

The other promising benchmark I saw on per CPU scaling was a few months ago with a posted super smack benchmark on a -current box that was getting a score of around 60,000 on a slightly better Quad core AMD64 machine which proves consistent scaling per core, which as far as my memory goes shows good scaling when entering the 4+ core arena on MySQL.

Mike


=== 4BSD + libthr + HTT off ===

Run #1
connect: max=5ms  min=2ms avg= 3ms from 10 clients
Query_type      num_queries     max_time        min_time        q_per_s
select_index    200000      0           0           18253.60


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