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The Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 server runs Solaris 10 OS to maximize utilization of your assets and optimized for
24x7 mission critical computing. Ideal for large shared memory applications and business process computing such as ERP,
BIDW, and OLTP. It also gives you a long, highly scalable SPARC growth path.
The Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 server, based on SPARC64 VI processors
running at 2.4GHz (16 chips, 32 cores), and using Sun Studio 12
software with Solaris 10 OS, delivered a score of 268.6 GFLOPS on the
Linpack HPC benchmark. This score
outperforms the best published IBM p570 score of 239.4 GFLOPS
(POWER6@4.7GHz, 8 chips, 16 cores) by over 12% and beats the HP rx8640
result of 192.4 GFLOPS (Itanium 2@1.6GHz/24MB, 16 chips, 32 cores)
system by 40%.
(4) Linpack HPC, results from http://www.netlib.org/benchmark/index.html as of 07/13/07.
Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 running at 2.4 GHz achieved 440,207 SPECjbb2005 bops, outperforming the IBM p5 570 34%.
(3) SPECjbb2005 Sun Fire M8000 (16 chips, 32 cores, 2.4 GHz) 440,207 SPECjbb2005 bops, 27,513 SPECjbb2005 bops/JVM submitted for review, IBM eServer
p5 570 (8 chips, 16 cores, 2.2 GHz) 326,651 SPECjbb2005 bops, 40,831 SPECjbb2005 bops/JVM. SPEC, SPECjbb reg tm of Standard Performance Evaluation
Corporation. Results as of 04/17/07 on www.spec.org.
The Sun SPARC Enterprise 8000 running at 2.28 GHz tops all results at 32 threads for the SPECompM2001 benchmark.
This beats the best IBM result by 31% and the IBM p5 560Q RedHat4 solution by 67%.
(2) SPEC, SPEComp reg tm of Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. Results from www.spec.org as of 04/17/07.
Sun results submitted to SPEC. Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 (32 cores, 16 chips, 32 threads, 2.28GHz) 54352 SPECompMbase2001. IBM p5 575 (16 cores, 8
chips, 32 threads, 1.9GHz) 45275 SPECompMbase2001. IBM p5 560Q (16 cores, 8 chips, 32 threads, 1.8GHz) 35534 SPECompMbase2001.
The 16-way Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 (16 processors, 32 cores, 64 threads) with 2.4 GHz SPARC64 VI processors achieved
7,300 users on the two-tier SAP Sales and Distribution (SD) standard SAP ERP 2005 application benchmark. This is a World Record for systems
with 16 or fewer processors as of 04/16/07, beating the16-way IBM p-570 (16 processors, 16 cores, 32 threads) by 32% and the 16-way HP Integrity
Superdome (16 processors, 32 cores, 64 threads) by 30%.
(1) SAP Sales and Distribution (SD) standard SAP ERP 2004/2005 application benchmark: Sun SPARC Enterprise M8000 (16-way,
16 processors, 32 cores, 64 threads) 7,300 users, 16 2.40 GHz SPARC64 VI, 256 GB, Oracle 10g, Solaris 10, Cert. 2007026,
Sun Fire E6900 (24-way, 24 processors, 48 cores, 48 threads) 6,160 users, 24 1950 MHz UltraSPARC IV+, 96 GB, Oracle 10g,
Solaris 10, Cert 2007023. HP Integrity Superdome-16 (16-way, 16 processors, 32 cores, 64 threads), 5,600 users, 16 1.6 GHz
Dual-Core Intel Itanium 2 9050, 256 GB, SQL Server 2005, Windows Server 2003 Datacenter Edition, Cert. 2006090; IBM p5 570
(16-way, 16 processors, 16 cores, 32 threads), 5,520 users, 16 2.2 GHz POWER5+, 128 GB, DB2 UDB 8.2.2, AIX 5.3, Cert. 2006044;
IBM p5 595 (64-way, 64 processors, 64 cores, 128 threads), 23,456 users, 64 2.3 GHz POWER5+, 512 GB, DB2 9, AIX 5.3, Cert. 2006045.
SAP, R/3, mySAP reg TM of SAP AG in Germany and other countries.
More info www.sap.com/benchmark.
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The Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC) is a non-profit corporation formed to establish, maintain and endorse a standardized set of relevant benchmarks that can be applied to the newest generation of high-performance computers. SPEC develops suites of benchmarks and also reviews and publishes submitted results from their member organizations and other benchmark licensees.
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SAP Standard Application Benchmarks test and prove the scalability of
mySAP Business Suite. The benchmark results provide basic sizing
recommendations for customers by testing new hardware, system software
components, and Relational Database Management Systems (RDBMS). They
also allow for the comparison of different system configurations. The
benchmarking procedure is standardized and well defined. It is monitored
by the SAP Benchmark Council made up of representatives of SAP and
technology partners involved in benchmarking. The SAP Standard
Application Benchmarks can also be used to test and verify scalability,
concurrency and multi-user behavior of system software components,
RDBMS, and business applications. All performance data relevant to
system, user, and business applications are monitored during a benchmark
run and can be used to compare platforms and as basic input for sizing
recommendations.
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