AnandTech Web DB Performance
6X Load 1494MB DB (Transactions per Second - Higher is Better)
4-way Intel Xeon MP 2.0GHz (Hyper-Threading)

4-way Intel Xeon MP 2.0GHz

2-way Intel Xeon DP 2.8GHz (Hyper-Threading)

2-way Intel Xeon MP 2.0GHz (Hyper-Threading)

2-way Intel Xeon DP 2.8GHz

2-way Intel Xeon MP 2.0GHz

2-way AMD Athlon MP 2200+

1728.1

1398.3

1170.3

1066.2

932.8

781.5

764.0

|
0
|
346
|
691
|
1037
|
1382
|
1728
|
2074

Things change slightly as we increase the load to 6X; for starters, the 2-way Athlon MP and 2-way Xeon MP setups swap positions but still offer very similar performance.

The 4-way Xeon MP continues to exert its dominance, extending its lead over the 2-way Xeon DP to 48%. The performance gain by going to 4 CPUs in this case ends up being an incredible 62%. It is clear that server applications scale much better with more processors than anything we could ever find in the desktop or workstation arenas.

Hyper-Threading continues to offer impressive performance gains; once again, the higher the load the more the CPU has to go to I/O and the more periods of idle execution are present. The end result is that Hyper-Threading yields a 23% gain on the 4-way Xeon MP, a 25% gain on the Xeon DP and a 36% gain on the Xeon MP. It is very interesting to note that the largest boost from Hyper-Threading comes with the 2-way Xeon MP setup and not the 2-way Xeon DP configuration as we originally theorized. One possible explanation is that the load isn't great enough to completely saturate the 2-way Xeon DP platform whereas the slower 2-way Xeon MPs are more CPU bound in this test; the outcome being that the CPU bound 2-way Xeon MP configuration benefits more from being able to use all of its execution power.

AnandTech Web DB Performance - 4X Load AnandTech Web DB Performance - 12X Load
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