Today, many versions of Enterprise Linux have been released, such as the familiar RHEL, CentOS, and Scientific. So what kind of gradual progress does the performance evolution of these Enterprise Linux versions present? Next, we need to refer to ScientificLinux5.7, ScientificLinux6.2, and Fedora16 (as a RedHatEnterpriseLinux7 Performance description)
Today, many versions of Enterprise Linux have been released, such as the familiar RHEL, CentOS, and Scientific. So what kind of gradual progress does the performance evolution of these Enterprise Linux versions present? Next, we will use Scientific Linux 5.7, Scientific Linux 6.2, and Fedora 16 (as a description of the performance of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7)
Scientific Linux 5.7 uses Linux 2.6.18 kernel, GNOME 2.16.0 desktop, X. Org 7.11, Mesa 6.5.1, GCC 4.1.2 compiler, and EXT3 file system.
The latest Scientific version is Scientific Linux 6.2, which adopts the RHEL 6.2 software package: Linux 2.6.32 kernel, GNOME 2.28.2 desktop, X. org Server 1.10.4, Mesa 7.11, GCC 4.4.6, and EXT4 file systems. The system kernel of Fedora 16 is Linux 3.2, GNOME Shell 3.2.1, X. Org Server 1.11.1, Mesa 7.11.2, GCC 4.6.2, and EXT4.
This test is based on the AMD haolong 2384 workstation and Intel core i7 990X flagship platform.