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- BENCHMARKING Windows and OS/2
- December 11, 1992
- by Timothy F. Sipples
-
- [This message is available as file winbench.txt, available via
- anonymous ftp from ftp-os2.nmsu.edu on the Internet. Followups may be
- directed to comp.os.os2.misc, but please redirect subsequent followups
- to comp.os.os2.advocacy as content warrants.]
-
- The following is a summary of results of the PC Magazine Winbench
- Version 2.51 benchmarking software when run under Windows 3.1 on
- DOS 5.02, Windows 3.1 NT (October public beta, CD-ROM), and OS/2 2.0x
- (November Professional Developer's Kit CD-ROM, the third public Win-OS/2
- 3.1 beta).
-
- Note that Microsoft does not recommend using NT currently for performance
- benchmarking. Also please note that these are a first set of
- benchmark figures for one particular benchmark. I hope to have numbers
- on a mixed sample Excel macro and on a disk I/O test. However, these
- numbers may be instructive.
-
- Insofar as possible an effort was made to compare apples to apples.
- Tests were conducted by IBM under the supervision of another customer
- and myself.
-
- The hardware consisted of an IBM PS/2 Model 95 with an 80486DX 33 MHz
- processor, 16 MB of RAM, XGA(-1) graphics adapter, and a 320 MB, 12 ms
- SCSI hard drive. (Aside from the addition of a CD-ROM drive and
- SoundBlaster adapter, this machine was a stock Model 95, including
- a busmastering 32-bit SCSI cache adapter. A standard PS/2 mouse was
- attached and was not moved while the benchmark was running.) (Other
- tests were performed on an IBM PS/2 Model 57 with standard VGA for
- comparison. These results are outlined in brief, below.)
-
- Note that Winbench measures graphics performance using the default
- weighting system from PC Magazine (and not set by IBM). As such, the
- hard disk details are not particularly relevant, since disk I/O
- throughput is not being measured. (With luck, I will try to obtain
- those results and release them in the near future.) Winbench runs
- entirely from memory, so disk I/O is not a factor. This benchmark
- measures pure graphics performance. However, on the slightest chance
- that disk I/O would skew any results, Winbench was loaded from the
- same location on disk for performance measurement under each operating
- system (environment). Also, just for the record, the hard disk was
- partitioned with 200 MB to OS/2 2.0x and 100 MB to Windows NT and
- Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02. All partitions were FAT. To install Windows NT
- Beta and OS/2 2.0x on the same hard disk required zeroing out the ID
- of the OS/2 Boot Manager partition. Windows NT Beta includes a specific
- check which is deliberately designed to refuse installation if OS/2
- Boot Manager is present on the hard disk. (OS/2 2.0x includes no such
- NT check.) Zeroing out the Boot Manager ID renders NT Beta installable
- while preserving OS/2 Boot Manager capabilities.
-
- All system defaults at install time were used. (Exception: OS/2 2.0x
- had PRIORITY_DISK_IO set to NO, FILES=100, and PRINTMONBUF=402,0,0.
- These settings are disk and printing related and do not impact Winbench.
- Also, DOS was loaded HIGH for the OS/2 2.0x DOS sessions, but every other
- default was retained for the Win-OS/2 sessions. The DOS HIGH setting
- also should not impact Winbench. DOS HIGH was the default on the other
- two.) Winbench was the only task running on each system when run.
-
- Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02 was installed with SMARTDRV using all default
- install time settings. Windows NT was installed with all default settings.
- All used 1024x768 in 256 colors for their desktops.
-
- [The "Optimized" OS/2 2.0 figure consists of the following changes to the
- session's DOS Settings: VIDEO_RETRACE_EMULATION from ON to OFF, EMS zeroed/
- disabled, XMS_MEMORY_LIMIT to 64K, IDLE_SENSITIVITY to 100, DDE and
- Clipboard changed from Public to Private, and VIDEO_8514A_XGA_IOTRAP from
- ON to OFF. These changes were made more to satisfy my curiosity than
- anything else.]
-
- Winbench supplies a final index number called the Graphics WinMark. This
- figure is the one presented below.
-
- As a baseline comparison, Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.0 on a Compaq 386/25e
- running with standard VGA at 640x480 in 16 colors generates 1,676,475
- WinMarks. (The higher the number of WinMarks, the faster the graphics
- performance.)
-
- Double trials were run in certain cases when the results seemed
- surprising. These double trials also give a sense of the small
- variance inherent in the Winbench benchmark.
-
- Here are the results:
-
- Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02, 386 Enhanced Mode 4,154,629
- Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02, Standard Mode 4,149,752
- OS/2 2.0x, Full Screen Win-OS/2 5,523,993
- OS/2 2.0x, FS Win-OS/2, "Optimized" (two trials) 5,600,009
- 5,585,557
- OS/2 2.0x, "Seamless" Win-OS/2 NOT TESTED
- (Winbench does not operate under the current Win-OS/2 beta in
- "seamless" mode.)
- Windows NT (two trials) 1,146,638
- 1,147,051
-
- Exact numbers are not available to me yet, but on a stock IBM PS/2
- Model 57 with 16 MB of RAM and standard VGA, the relative Winmarks
- were approximately as follows:
-
- Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02 100%
- OS/2 2.0x, FS Win-OS/2, Not "Optimized" 95%
- Windows NT Beta 40%
-
-
- PRELIMINARY CONCLUSIONS
-
- The major surprise to me was the sluggish graphics performance in
- Windows NT Beta, which is borne out by subjective perceptions as well.
- (I was heard to exclaim, "This is much faster" when the switch was
- made from Windows NT Beta to Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02.)
-
- At first I suspected that the peculiarity was confined to the XGA
- driver (perhaps a particularly bad implementation). But the VGA numbers
- seem to confirm that it isn't a driver issue (although it does point
- out that OS/2 takes good advantage of busmastered coprocessed video).
- (As another reference point, Windows 3.1 on DOS 5.02 generated 3,187,612
- Winmarks on the same IBM Model 95 when it was dropped down to VGA
- 640x480 16 color mode. Thus, Windows 3.1 on DOS benefits from XGA as
- well.) The Model 57 (not the 486SLC model, which was not tested) uses
- relatively slow, vanilla VGA hardware, and yet NT Beta suffers dramatically
- while OS/2 holds its own with Windows 3.1 for DOS, so it seems that
- OS/2's good showing is not due to any peculiarity with XGA.
-
- In any event, the clearest conclusion one can draw from these numbers,
- it seems, is that Windows NT Beta has a long way to go toward even
- coming close to the graphics performance in either OS/2 2.0x Win-OS/2
- or Windows 3.1 on DOS.
-
- One might argue that these numbers are based on a 16-bit Windows
- benchmark, and that NT might really shine with a 32-bit benchmark.
- Perhaps true, but when benchmarking one must try and relate the
- benchmarks back to reality. The vast installed base of PC software
- is 16-bit, and as users migrate to a new 32-bit operating system they
- will carry with them lots of 16-bit software. It will be some time,
- even under the rosiest scenarios, before any large portion of that
- software base is replaced with the 32-bit versions. And that 32-bit
- version could just as easily (if not more easily, since OS/2 2.0 has
- been a released, shrinkwrapped product for many months with hundreds
- of shipping 32-bit applications) be an OS/2 2.0 32-bit application as
- it could be a Windows NT 32-bit application.
-
- One might also argue that running Win-OS/2 full screen is overstating
- the OS/2 2.0x performance in relation to NT, since NT is doing something
- similar to OS/2 (in running Windows 16-bit applications "seamless") and
- since users will often run Windows applications "seamless" under OS/2 2.0x.
- Perhaps, and while the seamless Win-OS/2 numbers are not presented above,
- at least OS/2 2.0x gives the option of providing a mode which executes
- existing 16-bit Windows applications as fast as possible (in a desktop which
- is just like Windows for DOS -- or Windows NT, for that matter -- namely
- with a full screen Windows desktop) as well as the lower performance,
- "seamless" mode. NT does not offer both modes of operation -- there is
- but one desktop.
-
- Then there is the issue of standard v. enhanced mode, and OS/2's capabilities
- in running applications which require WINMEM32.DLL. The benchmark numbers
- were provided for Windows 3.1 in Standard Mode on DOS 5.02, for comparison,
- so that apples can be compared to apples. (In certain areas, Windows 3.1
- Standard Mode is faster than 386 Enhanced Mode, but this is not reflected in
- this particular benchmark.) The services provided by WINMEM32.DLL
- will not be available under Windows NT -- such applications will not run in
- the future under either operating system. This consideration is important when
- comparing the ease with which one can migrate to a 32-bit operating system.
- (The version of OS/2 2.0x under consideration can run with Windows real
- mode and Windows 3.0 kernels, as an option, simultaneously with the Windows
- 3.1 kernel, to provide better backward compatibility than Windows 3.1.)
-
- These results are preliminary and based on beta code. And the Winbench
- measure has its flaws. However, without dramatic performance improvements
- in Windows NT, OS/2 2.0 seems to offer dramatically better performance for
- the large library of 16-bit Windows 2.x and 3.x applications, thus protecting
- that substantial software investment. With XGA, OS/2 2.0x even outpaces
- Windows 3.1 for DOS in raw graphics performance, as measured in Winmarks.
- Windows NT Beta, on the other hand, when running on a speedy PS/2 Model 95,
- lags well behind even the baseline Compaq 386/25e in standard VGA, which is
- a system that is roughly half the speed of the Model 95 in almost every
- dimension.
-
- Note also that these tests were conducted on a 16 MB system, which, if anything,
- skews the results in favor of Windows NT Beta. The results may
- well have been even more striking with an 8 MB system, a more typical memory
- configuration. Windows NT Beta suffers performance problems on "low" RAM
- configurations (and, in this case, 8 MB qualifies). OS/2 2.0x, on the other
- hand, is very comfortable with such a RAM configuration. Winbench, when
- running on such a "constrained" system, may well have caused NT to page, thus
- impacting the results.
-
- I hope my description of the methodology used was clear, and I hope to be
- providing additional numbers in the near future.
-
- T.F.S.
-
-