Whetstone (Benchmark)

The Whetstone benchmark is a benchmark for evaluating the power of computers. It was first written in Algol 60 at the National Physical Laboratory in the United Kingdom and derived from statistics on program behaviour gathered on the KDF9 computer. using a modified version of its Whetstone Algol 60 compiler. The program's behavior replicated that of a typical KDF9 scientific program. and was designed to defeat compiler optimizations that would have adversely affected the accuracy of this model. The Whetstone benchmark originally measured computing power in units of kilo-Whetstone Instructions per seconds (kWIPS). Results for a variety of languages, compilers and system architectures have been obtained, and modern workstations typically achieve more than 1 000 000 kWIPS (a million kilo-Whetstone instructions per second).

External links

References

  • H. J. Curnow and B. A. Wichman, A Synthetic Benchmark, Computer Journal, Vol. 19 #1, February 1976

 

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