Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Sun, Mar 26, 2023 at 02:08:29PM -0500 schrieb Dale:
>> Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
>>> <<<SNIP>>>
>>> With each generation, the architecture becomes more efficient, meaning more 
>>> instructions per cycle, lower consumption and so on. The max frequency is 
>>> not really the driving force behind performance increase anymore due to 
>>> efficiency issues at higher frequencies.
>>>
>>> Here are some benchmark comparisons from cpubenchmark.net:
>>>
>>> Processor  year   power   cores   single-core score   multi-core score
>>> FX-8350    2012   125 W   8/8           1580               6026
>>> i5-4590    2014    84 W   4/4           2086               5356
>>> i5-10400   2020    65 W   6/12          2580              12258
>>> R3 4300G   2020    65 W   4/8           2557              11017
>>> R5 5600G   2021    65 W   6/12          3185              19892
>>> R5 7600X   2022   145 W   6/12          4213              28753
>>>
>>> Sources:
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/singleThread.html#desktop-thread
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+FX-8350+Eight-Core&id=1780
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i5-4590+%40+3.30GHz&id=2234
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i5-10400+%40+2.90GHz&id=3737
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Ryzen+3+4300G&id=3808
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Ryzen+5+5600G&id=4325
>>> https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Ryzen+5+7600X&id=5033
>>> […]
>> It's been a while.  I been getting some things ready for garden time and
>> a few spring projects as well.  I looked at a few lists of CPU
>> processors.  This is a bit pricey but I may try to buy a AMD Ryzen 9
>> 5900X 12-Core @ 3.7 GHz.  It has 4 more cores but clock speed is a
>> little slower.  Even just comparing number of cores and the fairly close
>> clock speed, that alone should make it a bit faster.  Add in that they
>> make them run code more efficiently now, should be a good bit better.  I
>> usually try to aim for 4 or 5 times more processing power.  I suspect
>> this may help with encryption as well since newer CPUs have extra code
>> just for that on there now.  Most of the mobos also handle a lot more
>> memory as well.  I have 32GBs now.  Most support 64GB and I think I saw
>> a 128GB version somewhere. 
>>
>> Just comparing CPU to CPU, what would you expect as far as increase in
>> speed?  I'm not expecting a exact number, just curious as to how much
>> difference I could reasonably expect. 
> Since I personally don’t have any experience with high-performance 
> contemporary CPUs and can’t remember all those reviews I read in my newsfeed 
> from time to time, I tend to visit benchmark sites like the aforementioned 
> cpubenchmark.net. Those provide comparable numbers of synthetic and/or 
> real-world benchmarks for both single- and multi-core use cases.
>
> The Phoronix Test Suite is another notable name, and also very 
> linux-centric. I haven’t used that one myself yet, but have a look and click 
> around:
> https://openbenchmarking.org/suites/pts
>
> It’s open source, so you can run it on your own machine to get comparison 
> numbers.
>

I used to use the bogomips number as a rough guide.  Thing is, the new
CPU has a lower bogomips number than my current CPU does.  That doesn't
seem right.  So, I guess that number no longer means much.  So, I went
digging on the site you linked to.  I found this but not sure what to
make of it. 

https://openbenchmarking.org/vs/Processor/AMD+Ryzen+9+5900X+12-Core,AMD+FX-8350+Eight-Core

Some tests, my CPU is faster.  Most, the new one is faster.  Some by
quite a bit.  It seems most things would improve but others may not.  Am
I reading that correctly?  I'm trying to figure if I'd be better in the
long run to buy that expensive CPU or pick one of the cheaper ones you
mentioned.  I started off with a 4 core on current rig and went to 8
core and slightly higher frequency.  Money wise it was pretty painless. 
I could do that again with new rig.

Once I pick a CPU, the rest will come easier.  Mobos have to have the
right socket, then it has only certain memory sticks that will fit etc
etc etc. 

Thanks for any light you can shed on this.  Googling just leads to a ton
of confusion.  What's true 6 months ago is wrong today.  :/  It's hard
to tell what still applies.

Dale

:-)  :-) 

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