IBM Breaks Double Digit Performance Barrier With 10 Million Transactions Per Minute
IBM
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IBM achieved the industry's highest ever TPC-C (transaction processing) benchmark result using a Power Systems configuration with DB2, hitting 10,366,254 tpmC,(1). The IBM result delivered the follow breakthrough results including:
-- Performance more than 2.5 times better than HP's best result(2), 69% greater performance per core, and 2.1 times better price/performance -- Performance more than 35% better than Oracle's best result(3), 2.7 times better performance per core, 41% better price performance, and 35% better energy efficiency per transaction
Organizations across all industries are demanding systems that address the data intensive workload demands of today's applications and services with better performance and lower cost. Per-core performance is important for clients in industries such as energy, mobile communications and financial services, who run database application workloads that use per-core pricing when determining total solution cost. Fewer cores for the same performance can translate to significant and direct savings in licensing and ongoing annual software maintenance costs.
"Smarter healthcare providers, cities, retailers, smarter energy grids and financial systems, all require support for ever greater data volumes and transaction throughput," said Arvind Krishna, General Manager, IBM Information Management. "The results of this benchmark demonstrate how IBM innovations combine to deliver unprecedented performance and cost efficiency for data intensive applications. Not only can you scale to massive data volumes and transaction throughput, but you can do so economically in an energy efficient way."
This TPC-C benchmark with DB2 9.7 was done with a cluster of three IBM Power 780 servers, each with 8 processors, 64 cores, and 256 threads achieving a throughput of 10,366,254 tpmC at $1.38/tpmC with availability date of October 13, 2010. Full details of this and other above mentioned TPC results are available at www.tpc.org.
IBM Power Systems claim leadership in more than 100 key computing performance benchmarks. For more details, please visit http://www.ibm.com/systems/power/hardware/benchmarks.
About IBM For more information about IBM, please visit www.ibm.com.
(1) IBM Power7 Benchmark Result: IBM Power 780: 10,366,254 tpmC at $1.38USD/tpmC available October 13, 2010, running on 3 nodes with a total of 24 processors, 192 cores and 768 threads. Energy requirements generated using customer-available energy estimation tools for IBM servers and IBM Techline services for storage. Energy estimates are not related to, and should not be compared to, official TPC-Energy results.
(2) HP Benchmark Result: HP Integrity Superdome: 4,092,799 tpmC at $2.93 USD/tpmC, available August 6, 2007, running on 1 node with a total of 64 processors, 128 cores and 256 threads.
(3) Oracle Sun Benchmark Result: Sun SPARC Enterprise T5440: 7,646,486 tpmC at $2.36USD/tpmC, available March 19, 2010, running on 12 nodes with a total of 48 processors, 384 cores and 3,072 threads. Energy requirements taken from an Oracle-commissioned report located at http://www.oracle.com/features/strategic-focus-report.pdf. Energy estimates are not related to, and should not be compared to, official TPC-Energy results.
Results current as of August 17, 2010. TPC, TPC Benchmark, TPC-C and tpmC are trademarks of the Transaction Processing Performance Council.
Lizette Kodama IBM Media Relations 914-766-1347
First Call Analyst:
FCMN Contact: lkodama@us.ibm.com
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CONTACT: Lizette Kodama, IBM Media Relations, +1-914-766-1347
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