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  2. Coremark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coremark

    CoreMark draws on the strengths that made Dhrystone so resilient - it is small, portable, easy to understand, free, and displays a single number benchmark score. Unlike Dhrystone, CoreMark has specific run and reporting rules, and was designed to avoid the well understood issues that have been cited with Dhrystone.

  3. SPECint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPECint

    CPU2006 is a set of benchmarks designed to test the CPU performance of a modern server computer system. It is split into two components, the first being CINT2006, the other being CFP2006 , for floating point testing. SPEC defines a base runtime for each of the 12 benchmark programs. For SPECint2006, that number ranges from 1000 to 3000 seconds.

  4. Snappy (compression) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snappy_(compression)

    Compression speed is 250 MB/s and decompression speed is 500 MB/s using a single core of a circa 2011 "Westmere" 2.26 GHz Core i7 processor running in 64-bit mode. The compression ratio is 20–100% lower than gzip. [5] Snappy is widely used in Google projects like Bigtable, MapReduce and in compressing data for Google's internal RPC systems.

  5. Geekbench - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geekbench

    It uses a scoring system that separates single-core and multi-core performance, [7] [8] and workloads designed to simulate real-world scenarios. [9] The software benchmark is available for macOS, Windows, Linux, Android and iOS. Free users are required to upload test results online in order to run the benchmark.

  6. Comparison of ARM processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_ARM_processors

    Core Decode width Execution ports Pipeline depth Out-of-order execution FPU Pipelined VFP FPU registers NEON (SIMD) big.LITTLE role Virtualization [2] Process technology L0 cache L1 cache L2 cache Core configurations Speed per core (DMIPS / MHz) ARM part number (in the main ID register) ARM Cortex-A5: 1: 8: No VFPv4 (optional) 16 × 64-bit: 64 ...

  7. Single-core - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-core

    A computer using a single core CPU is generally slower than a multi-core system. Single core processors used to be widespread in desktop computers, but as applications demanded more processing power, the slower speed of single core systems became a detriment to performance. Windows supported single-core processors up until the release of ...

  8. Comparison of CPU microarchitectures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_CPU_micro...

    Multi-core, single issue, in-order ARM Cortex-A7 MPCore: 8 Partial dual-issue, in-order, 2-way set associative level 1 instruction cache ARM Cortex-A8: 2005 13 Dual-issue, in-order, speculative execution, superscalar, 2-way pipeline decode ARM Cortex-A9 MPCore: 2007 8–11 Out-of-order, speculative issue, superscalar ARM Cortex-A15 MPCore: 2010 15

  9. EEMBC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EEMBC

    AndEBench-Pro - system benchmark providing a standardized, industry-accepted method of evaluating Android platform performance. It's available for free download in Google Play. FPMark - multi-threaded code for both single- and double-precision floating-point workloads, as well as small, medium, and large data sets.