Benchmarked Hardware Configurations

Below you can find the configuration of the servers we used. The reason that we used 24GB is that we immediately started testing with two tiles (eight VMs) after the first tests. VMs together with the Nieuws.be OLAP databases are stored on two 1TB WDC WD1000FYPS SATA hard drives; the OLTP databases are on an Intel X25-E SSD while the logs are on a separate X25-E SSD. As our measurement show, DQL is very low thanks to this storage setup.

All tests are conducted on ESX 3.5 Update 4 (Build 153875).

Xeon Server 1: ASUS RS700-E6/RS4 barebone
(Additional information on this server)
Dual Intel Xeon "Gainestown" X5570 2.93GHz
ASUS Z8PS-D12-1U
6x4GB (24GB) ECC Registered DDR3-1333
NIC: Intel 82574L PCI-E Gbit LAN

Xeon Server 2: Intel "Stoakley platform" server
Dual Intel Xeon E5450 "Harpertown" at 3GHz
Supermicro X7DWE+/X7DWN+
24GB (12x2GB) Crucial Registered FB-DIMM DDR2-667 CL5 ECC
NIC: Dual Intel PRO/1000 Server NIC

Xeon Server 3: Intel "Bensley platform" server
Dual Intel Xeon X5365 "Clovertown" 3GHz
Dual Intel Xeon L5320 at 1.86GHz
Dual Intel Xeon 5080 "Dempsey" at 3.73GHz
Supermicro X7DBE+
24GB (12x2GB) Crucial Registered FB-DIMM DDR2-667 CL5 ECC
NIC: Dual Intel PRO/1000 Server NIC

Opteron Server: Supermicro SC828TQ-R1200LPB 2U Chassis
Dual AMD Opteron 8389 at 2.9GHz
Dual AMD Opteron 2222 at 3.0GHz
Dual AMD Opteron 8356 at 2.3GHz
Supermicro H8QMi-2+
24GB (12x2GB) DDR2-800
NIC: Dual Intel PRO/1000 Server NIC

vApus/DVD Store/Oracle Calling Circle Client Configuration
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4GHz
Foxconn P35AX-S
4GB (2x2GB) Kingston DDR2-667
NIC: Intel PRO/1000

vApus Mark I vs. VMmark Heavy Virtualization Benchmarking
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  • GotDiesel - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    "Yes, this article is long overdue, but the Sizing Server Lab proudly presents the AnandTech readers with our newest virtualization benchmark, vApus Mark I, which uses real-world applications in a Windows Server Consolidation scenario."

    spoken with a mouth full of microsoft cock

    where are the Linux reviews ?

    not all of us VM with windows you know..

  • JohanAnandtech - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    A minimum form of politeness would be appreciated, but I am going to assume your were just dissapointed.

    The problem is that right now the calling circle benchmark runs half as fast on Linux as it does on Windows. What is causing Oracle to run slower on Linux than on Windows is a mystery even to some of the experienced DBA we have spoken. We either have to replace that benchmark with an alternative (probably Sysbench) or find out what exactly happened.

    When you construct a virtualized benchmark it is not enough just to throw in a few benchmarks and VMs, you really have to understand the benchmark thoroughly. There are enough halfbaken benchmarks already on the internet that look like a Swiss cheese because there are so many holes in the methodology.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    Page 4: vApus Mark I: the choices we made

    "vApus mark I uses only Windows Guest OS VMs, but we are also preparing a mixed Linux and Windows scenario."

    Building tests, verifying tests, running them on all the servers takes a lot of time. That's why the 2-tile and 3-tile results are not yet ready. I suppose Linux will have to wait for Mark II (or Mark I.1).
  • mino - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    What you did so far is great. No more words needed.

    What I would like to see is vApus Mark I "small" where you make the tiles smaller, about 1/3 to 1/4 of your current tiles.
    Tile structure shall remain simmilar for simplicity, they will just be smaller.

    When you manage to have 2 different tile sizes, you shall be able to consider 1 big + 1 small tile as one "condensed" tile for general score.

    Having 2 reference points will allow for evaluating "VM size scaling" situations.
  • JohanAnandtech - Sunday, May 24, 2009 - link

    Can you elaborate a bit? What do you menan by "1/3 of my current tile?" . A tile = 4 VMs. are you talking about small mem footprint or number of VCPUs?

    Are you saying we should test with a Tile with small VMs and then test afterwards with the large ones? How do you see such "VM scaling" evaluation?
  • mino - Monday, May 25, 2009 - link

    Thanks for response.

    1/3 I mean smaller VM's. Mostly from the load POW. Probably 1/3 load would go for 1/2 memory footprint.

    The point being that currently the is only a single datapont with a specific load-size per tile/per VM.

    By "VM scaling" I would like to see what effect woul smaller loads have on overal performance.

    I suggest 1/3 or 1/4 the load to get a measurable difference while remaining within reasonable memory/VM scale.

    In the end, if you get simmilar overal performance from 1/4 tiles, it may not make sense to include this in future.
    Even then the information that your benchmark results can be safely extrapolated to smaller loads would be of a great value by itself.
  • mino - Monday, May 25, 2009 - link

    Eh, that last text of mime looks like a nice gibberish...
    Clarification nneded:

    To be able to run more tiles/box smaller memory footprint is a must.
    With smaller mem footprint, smaller DB's are a must.

    The end results may not be directly comparable but shall be able to give some reference point, corectly interpreted

    Please let me know if this makes sense to you.
    There are multiple dimensions to this. I may be easily on the imaginery branch :)
  • ibb27 - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    Can we have a chance to see benchmarks for Sun Virtualbox which is Opensource?
  • winterspan - Tuesday, May 26, 2009 - link

    This test is misleading because you are not using the latest version of VMware that supports Intel's EPT. Since AMD's version of this is supported in the older version, the test is not at all a fair representation of their respective performance.
  • Zstream - Thursday, May 21, 2009 - link

    Can someone please perform a Win2008 RC2 Terminal Server benchmark? I have been looking everywhere and no one can provide that.

    If I can take this benchmark and tell my boss this is how the servers will perform in a TS environment please let me know.

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