From: George Nychis <gnychis@cmu.edu>
To: "Barry K. Nathan" <barryn@pobox.com>
Cc: lkml <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: what processor family does intel core duo L2400 belong to?
Date: Thu, 08 Jun 2006 21:28:58 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4488CEDA.9060104@cmu.edu> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <986ed62e0606081750w1be36f9fn35d69bffbc27f294@mail.gmail.com>
Barry K. Nathan wrote:
> On 6/8/06, George Nychis <gnychis@cmu.edu> wrote:
>
>> Put me in your shoes, what would you test to see which one is the true
>> choice?
>
>
> I'd start by seeing which one (if either) will boot the system (with
> CONFIG_X86_GENERIC disabled). In the past, when I've had trouble
> deciding, this has actually eliminated more possibilities than you
> might expect.
>
> Beyond that, I don't know for certain what I would test with. Perhaps
> I'd start with lmbench, or if I was using the system for 3D stuff,
> perhaps framerates from glxgears or a 3D game. If I was using the
> system for network stuff, I'd run network benchmarks. (Perhaps disk
> benchmarks would be good too, but my experience is that network
> performance tends to suffer first and/or more severely, especially if
> Gigabit Ethernet or slow CPU's are involved.)
>
> If both choices boot, the performance difference may be quite small.
Both booted... I was hoping this would be a lot more straight forward :P
I am getting the feeling that pentium-m might outperform... my true P4
computer is in family 15, whereas my PIII is in family 6, just like the
Core Duo L2400
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-06-09 1:29 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-06-08 23:23 what processor family does intel core duo L2400 belong to? George Nychis
2006-06-08 23:50 ` Barry K. Nathan
2006-06-09 0:28 ` George Nychis
2006-06-09 0:50 ` Barry K. Nathan
2006-06-09 1:28 ` George Nychis [this message]
2006-06-09 1:43 ` George Nychis
2006-06-09 1:09 ` dean gaudet
2006-06-09 6:32 ` Andi Kleen
2006-06-09 8:49 ` Pádraig Brady
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