PETSc, the Portable, Extensible Toolkit for Scientific Computation, is for the scalable (parallel) solution of scientific applications modeled by partial differential equations. This test profile runs the PETSc "make streams" benchmark and records the throughput rate when all available cores are utilized for the MPI Streams build.
To run this test with the Phoronix Test Suite, the basic command is: phoronix-test-suite benchmark petsc.
OpenBenchmarking.org metrics for this test profile configuration based on 232 public results since 21 April 2023 with the latest data as of 17 November 2024.
Below is an overview of the generalized performance for components where there is sufficient statistically significant data based upon user-uploaded results. It is important to keep in mind particularly in the Linux/open-source space there can be vastly different OS configurations, with this overview intended to offer just general guidance as to the performance expectations.
Based on OpenBenchmarking.org data, the selected test / test configuration (PETSc 3.19 - Test: Streams) has an average run-time of 49 minutes. By default this test profile is set to run at least 3 times but may increase if the standard deviation exceeds pre-defined defaults or other calculations deem additional runs necessary for greater statistical accuracy of the result.
Based on public OpenBenchmarking.org results, the selected test / test configuration has an average standard deviation of 1.2%.
This benchmark has been successfully tested on the below mentioned architectures. The CPU architectures listed is where successful OpenBenchmarking.org result uploads occurred, namely for helping to determine if a given test is compatible with various alternative CPU architectures.
4 Systems - 8 Benchmark Results |
AMD EPYC 9655P 96-Core - Supermicro Super Server H13SSL-N v1.01 - AMD 1Ah Ubuntu 24.10 - 6.12.0-rc7-phx - GNOME Shell 47.0 |
3 Systems - 21 Benchmark Results |
2 x AMD EPYC 9755 128-Core - AMD VOLCANO - AMD Device 153a Ubuntu 24.04 - 6.8.0-45-generic - GCC 13.2.0 + Clang 18.1.3 |