One area that we are still troubleshooting is the cryptohash benchmark. The lack of Turbo Boost means that on single and multi-threaded benchmarks the chip will trail its Avoton C2750 counterpart. Intel Atom C2758 Rangeley hardinfo benchmarksįor the most part, the Intel Atom C2758 falls in-line with our expectations. It tests a number of CPU performance aspects. Hardinfo is a well known Linux benchmark that has been around for years. The simple reason is that this is still a “low end” server platform and small text is hard to read. One other note, unlike most of our other reviews, we are keeping the comparison set relatively smaller with these benchmark tables. Since we do not have access to every possible configuration, we would appreciate feedback in that thread which can be as simple as posting log files to run. The net goal is that we want others to be able to reproduce benchmarks and compare directly to their systems. It also has a development version which currently can also run on CentOS and Mint, and expands the suite to include sysbench and redis-benchmark results. That guide has three simple commands that you can use with a stock installation to run our test suite and install/ compile all necessary files. See Introducing the STHbench.sh Server Benchmarking Script on the forums. As a direct result of user feedback, we recently had the benchmarks all put into a single script that you can use to benchmark your own systems.
#Untangle firewall spi install#
We utilize a clean Ubuntu 13.10 installation with updates then install required packages and benchmark. We are using our standard Linux benchmarking suite to get an idea about Intel Atom C2758 performance. Overall, this is a fairly common configuration that one may use with the C2758. Motherboard/ CPU: Supermicro A1SRi-2758F with Intel C2758 Rangeley 8C/ 8T SoC.
These are otherwise identical platforms other than the processor. Test Configurationįor this test we used the Supermicro A1SRi-2758F which is a sister platform to the Supermicro A1SAi-2750F. For those readers of this site, one of the common applications QuickAssist works with is snort, so for those using Rangeley as a UTM or firewall appliance, it is a major consideration. Overall we are taking a look at the processor performance today, not QuickAssist.
Avoton (C2750) has turbo boost, Rangeley (C2758) does not.As a recap, the major difference between the Avoton and Rangeley parts are: Intel is targeting the Rangeley platform towards networking appliances, and that makes sense given some of the features the chips have. It is very similar to the Intel Atom C2750 “Avoton” processor we benchmarked a few months ago in that it is based on the same architecture and is an 8-core processor. For those who have been keeping track, the Intel Atom C2758 is one of Intel’s new 22nm SoC processors. Recently we had the opportunity to benchmark the Intel Atom C2758 Rangeley processor.