>> 800 MHz Ti PowerBook (G4), using Python from CVS, output of make >> (second run of two, to make sure pyo files were already generated): >> >> time python -O b.py >@out >> >> real 0m49.999s >> user 0m46.610s >> sys 0m1.030s >> cmp @out out >> >> The best-of-three pystone measurement is 10964.9 pystones/second. Michael> Bloody hell, that about what I get on my 600Mhz G3 iBook (same Michael> model as Dan's, sounds like). Does your TiBook have no cache Michael> or a *really* slow bus or something? The Apple System Profiler says my bus speed is 133MHz. I have a 256K L2 cache and a 1MB L3 cache. The machine has 1GB of RAM. Some rather simple operations slow down considerably after the system's been up awhile (and I do tend to leave it up for days or weeks at a time). I don't recall how long it had been up when I ran those tests. I just ran pystone again - it's been up 2 days, 19 hrs at the moment - and got significantly better numbers: % python ~/src/python/head/dist/src/Lib/test/pystone.py Pystone(1.1) time for 50000 passes = 3.82 This machine benchmarks at 13089 pystones/second % python ~/src/python/head/dist/src/Lib/test/pystone.py Pystone(1.1) time for 50000 passes = 3.83 This machine benchmarks at 13054.8 pystones/second % python ~/src/python/head/dist/src/Lib/test/pystone.py Pystone(1.1) time for 50000 passes = 3.78 This machine benchmarks at 13227.5 pystones/second Rerunning the parrotbench code shows a decided improvement as well: % make time python -O b.py >@out real 0m40.018s user 0m38.620s sys 0m0.900s cmp @out out Skip
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