Zuletzt geändert am 6. August 2013 um 19:12

UnixBench

Beschreibung von der UnixBench Homepage[1]:

UnixBench is the original BYTE UNIX benchmark suite, updated and revised by many people over the years.

The purpose of UnixBench is to provide a basic indicator of the performance of a Unix-like system; hence, multiple tests are used to test various aspects of the 
system's  performance. These test results are then compared to the scores from a baseline system to produce an index value, which is generally easier to handle than
the   raw scores. The entire set of index values is then combined to make an overall index for the system.

Some very simple graphics tests are included to measure the 2D and 3D graphics performance of the system.

Multi-CPU systems are handled. If your system has multiple CPUs, the default behaviour is to run the selected tests twice -- once with one copy of each test program 
running at a time, and once with N copies, where N is the number of CPUs. This is designed to allow you to assess:

  - the performance of your system when running a single task
  - the performance of your system when running multiple tasks
  - the gain from your system's implementation of parallel processing 

Do be aware that this is a system benchmark, not a CPU, RAM or disk benchmark. The results will depend not only on your hardware, but on your operating system,  
libraries, and even compiler. 

Vorbereitung

Folgende Pakete müssen installiert sein:

libx11-dev 
libgl1-mesa-dev 
libxext-dev 
perl  
perl-modules 
make
gcc

Bei Debian:

apt-get install libx11-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libxext-dev perl  perl-modules make gcc

Unix Bench runterladen und starten

wget http://byte-unixbench.googlecode.com/files/UnixBench5.1.3.tgz
tar xfv UnixBench5.1.3.tgz
cd UnixBench
./Run

Nach ein paar Minuten bekommt man dann das Ergebnis angezeigt.

Downloads

UnixBench5.1.3.tgz: [2]

unixbench-5.1.2.tar.gz: [3]