InfoWorld Article on Win 7 Multicore/thread Performance

    InfoWorld Article on Win 7 Multicore/thread Performance


    Posted: 13 Jan 2010
    Source: Windows 7's killer feature: Windows on multicore, redux | Windows - InfoWorld


    Back in January 2009, I published the first half of my groundbreaking study on multicore support under Microsoft Windows. The article featured an in-depth look at multicore/multiprocessor performance under Windows 7, Vista, and XP, including extensive benchmark data for each platform. At the time, I concluded that Windows 7 -- and to a lesser degree, Vista -- delivered better scalability moving from single-core to dual- and quad-core architectures. However, I also noted that this advantage was not yet sufficient to allow Windows 7 to overtake the leaner, more efficient XP under heavy workloads.

    What a difference a year makes! After revisiting my earlier test scenarios using a newer, Nehalem-based workstation (the HP Z800 with dual quad-core Xeon 5500-series CPUs), I'm pleased to report that Windows 7 not only closes the gap with Windows XP, but blows right past it, delivering results that are 47 to 178 percent faster overall. Moreover, Windows 7 shows far superior scalability -- by a factor of more than 3.5 -- when moving from a single quad-core CPU (Core 2 Duo Extreme QX9300) to the dual quad-core, Hyper-Threading Xeons in our newer Z800 test bed.

    [ Windows 7 is an InfoWorld 2010 Technology of the Year Award winner. Take a quick tour of all 21 winners | Don't miss InfoWorld's top 10 Windows tools for IT pros and the best free open source software for Windows. ]

    In my earlier article, I posited that, as multicore PCs evolve and the number of cores increases, the superior scalability of the Windows 7 kernel would eventually overcome Windows XP in terms of raw application throughput. But I had figured this inflection point to be well into the many-core future and suggested we would be lucky to see Windows 7 overtaking XP before 16- or 32-core CPUs were commonplace. It's now clear that my prediction was off by a factor of 3 or 4, and that the point where a combination of multicore hardware and kernel tuning wins out over the simpler, brute-force approach of the XP kernel has already been reached.

    Simply put, Windows 7 is significantly faster than Windows XP when running heavy, multitasking workloads on advanced, multicore hardware. And when considered in light of current trends in PC hardware design and multicore road maps, this advantage should be enough to sway even the most ardent fence sitters to finally jump on the Windows 7 bandwagon.

    The quote is just the first few paragraphs. Please follow the link above for the whole article.
    Scotteq's Avatar Posted By: Scotteq
    13 Jan 2010



 

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