Intel Xeon Max Sees Some Performance Gains For OpenVINO & ONNX With Linux 6.9

Written by Michael Larabel in Software on 4 April 2024 at 10:30 AM EDT. Page 4 of 5. 2 Comments.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Face Detection FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Person Detection FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Person Detection FP32, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Vehicle Detection FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Face Detection FP16-INT8, Device: CPU. Linux 6.8 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Road Segmentation ADAS FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Weld Porosity Detection FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Weld Porosity Detection FP16-INT8, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
OpenVINO benchmark with settings of Model: Age Gender Recognition Retail 0013 FP16, Device: CPU. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.

In some of the OpenVINO AI benchmarks there were slight gains to find with the Linux 6.9 kernel run.

RocksDB benchmark with settings of Test: Overwrite. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
RocksDB benchmark with settings of Test: Update Random. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
Speedb benchmark with settings of Test: Random Fill. Linux 6.8 was the fastest.
Speedb benchmark with settings of Test: Update Random. Linux 6.9-rc2 was the fastest.
Speedb benchmark with settings of Test: Random Read. Linux 6.8 was the fastest.
Speedb benchmark with settings of Test: Read Random Write Random. Linux 6.8 was the fastest.

The RocksDB and Speedb databases were showing some gains for AMD EPYC Genoa-X on Linux 6.9 but in the case of the Xeon Max server the results were flat.


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