Installing SPEC CPU2006 Under Unix, Linux, and Mac OS&nb
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Installing SPEC CPU2006 Under Unix, Linux, and
Mac OS X
Last updated: $Date: 2014-11-21 16:44:34 -0500 (Fri, 21 Nov 2014) $ by $Author: CathySandifer $
(To check for possible updates to this document, please
see
This document has been updated for SPEC CPU2006 V1.2, including a new example installation.
Contents
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
5.a.
5.b.
5.c.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Appendix
1:
A1.
A2.
Appendix
2:
Note:
- www.spec.org/cpu2006/Docs/
-
The
$SPEC/Docs/ (Unix) or %SPEC%\Docs\ (Windows) directory on a system where SPEC CPU2006 has been installed. -
The
Docs/ directory on your SPEC CPU2006 distribution DVD.
Installation Steps
The SPEC CPU2006 suite has been tested under Unix, Linux, Mac OS X and Windows XP systems. Your DVD can be installed under many operating systems.
Reminder: the SPEC license allows you to install on multiple systems as you may wish within your institution; but you may not share the software with the public.
The installation procedure for Unix, Linux, and Mac OS X is as follows:
1. Review Pre-requisites
Review the hardware and software requirements,
in
2. Create destination. Have enough space, avoid space.
Create a directory on the destination disk. You should make sure
that you have a disk that has at least 8GB free. (For more
information on disk usage, see
Don't put spaces in the
path:
3. Mount the DVD
Insert the the DVD, and, if necessary, issue
a
| AIX: | mount -v cdrfs -r /dev/cd0 /cdrom |
| HP-UX: | mount -o cdcase /dev/disk/disk5 /mnt/cdrom/ |
| Linux: | mount -t iso9660 -o ro,exec /dev/cdrom /mnt |
| Solaris: |
If Volume Management is running, you should find that the DVD is
automatically mounted,
as mkdir /mnt1 mount -F hsfs -o ro /dev/dsk/c0t6d0s0 /mnt1 |
| Virtual Machines |
If you are running in a virtual machine, you will need to convince
the host operating system to allow your guest OS to have access to
the DVD. The means of accomplishing this will vary. For reference,
the following worked with a Linux guest running under Virtual Box
V4.0.6, with Windows 7 as the host: (1) |
Note that you may need root privileges to mount the DVD.
The following paragraphs assume that your DVD drive is on the
same system as where you wish to install. If it is on a different
system, please see
4. Set your directory to the DVD
If you haven't already done so by now, start a Terminal window (aka
"command window", "shell", "console", "terminal emulator",
"character cell window", "xterm", etc.) and issue
a
$ cd /Volumes/SPEC_CPU2006 $ cd /media/SPEC_CPU2006 $ cd /dvdrom/spec_cpu2006 $ cd /mnt
5. Use install.sh
Type:
./install.sh
q.
Do you have to be root?
when you meant to say:
then you will very
grateful if you are
(*) This is only a recommendation, not a requirement nor a rule.
5.a. Destination selection
Depending on your installation type, you may be prompted for a destination directory:
SPEC CPU2006 Installation Top of the CPU2006 tree is '/Volumes/SPEC_CPU2006' Enter the directory you wish to install to (e.g. /usr/cpu2006) /Users/kgoel/cpu2006
When answering the above question, note that you will have to use
syntax acceptable
to
Note:
./install.sh -d
/Users/kgoel/cpu2006
The installation procedure will show you the directories that will be used to install from and to. You will see a message such as this one:
Installing FROM /Volumes/SPEC_CPU2006 Installing TO /Users/kgoel/cpu2006 Is this correct? (Please enter 'yes' or 'no') yes
Enter "yes" if the
directories match your expectations. If there is an error, enter
"no", and the
procedure will exit, and you can try again, possibly using
the
5.b. Toolset selection
The installation procedure will attempt to automatically determine your current platform type (hardware architecture, operating system, etc.) In some cases, the tools may identify several candidate matches for your architecture.
You typically do not have to worry about whether the toolset is an
exact match to your current environment, because the toolset
selection
Examples: (1)
Mostly, you don't need to worry about all this, because the
installation procedure does a comprehensive set of tests to verify
compatibility.
If at least one candidate match is found, you will see a message such as:
The following toolset is expected to work on your platform. If the
automatically installed one does not work, please re-run install.sh and
exclude that toolset using the '-e' switch.
The toolset selected will not affect your benchmark scores.
macosx For MacOS X 10.4+ on Intel systems.
Built on MacOS X 10.6.6 with GCC 4.0.1, using
the 10.4u SDK.
If the installation procedure is unable to determine your system architecture, you will see a message such as:
We do not appear to have vendor supplied binaries for your
architecture. You will have to compile the tool binaries by
yourself. Please read the file
/Volumes/SPEC_CPU2006/Docs/tools_build.html
for instructions on how you might be able to build them.
If you see that message, please stop here, and examine the
file
Note:
./install.sh -e linux-redhat72-ia32
The above will cause the tools for
Alternatively, you can explicitly direct which toolset is to be
used with the
./install.sh -u linux-suse10-amd64
The above will cause the tools for
5.c. The files are unpacked and tested
Thousands of files will be unpacked from the distribution media,
and quietly installed on your destination disk. (If you would
prefer to see them all named you can
set
================================================================= Attempting to install the the macosx toolset... <<-- or whatever toolset was selected Unpacking CPU2006 base files (129.8 MB) Unpacking 400.perlbench benchmark and data files (61.5 MB) . . (lines omitted) . Checking the integrity of your source tree... Checksums are all okay. Unpacking binary tools for macosx... <<-- your toolset Checking the integrity of your binary tools... Checksums are all okay. Testing the tools installation (this may take a minute) ........................................................................o................o.................... .......o............................o....................................................................... Installation successful. Source the shrc or cshrc in /Users/kgoel/cpu2006 <<-- your directory to set up your environment for the benchmark.
At this point, you will have consumed about 1.5GB of disk space on the destination drive.
6. Source shrc or cshrc
Change your current directory to the top-level SPEC directory and
source either
-
For example, if you are using a Bourne-compatible shell (such as ash, bash, ksh, zsh), you could type:
Users$cd /Users/kgoel/cpu2006/
cpu2006$. ./shrc <-- that's dot-space-dot-slash-shrc -
If you are using a csh-compatible shell, you could type:
Users%cd /Users/kgoel/cpu2006
cpu2006%source cshrc (History: The cshrc script was added in SPEC CPU2006 V1.0.)
The effect of the above commands is to set up environment variables and paths for SPEC.
From this point forward, we are testing basic abilities of the SPEC CPU2006 kit, including compiling benchmarks and running them. You may skip the remaining steps if all of the following are true:
- You are confident that the previous steps have gone smoothly.
- You will not be compiling the benchmarks.
- Someone else has given you pre-compiled binaries.
Warning:
7. Try to build one benchmark
Change to
the
$ cd $SPEC/config $ cp Example-macosx-gcc421.cfg Khushboo-macosx.cfg $ runspec --config=Khushboo-macosx.cfg --action=build --tune=base bzip2
The above command assumes that you can identify a config file (in
the directory
- Hints about picking Linux config files are included in the long
example
below. - For a quick introduction to config files,
see
"About Config Files" in runspec.html - You may need to copy one of the supplied config files, and edit it for your system.
- For example, you may need to edit it to have the correct path to your compiler!
The "--tune=base" above indicates that we want to use only the simple tuning, if more than one kind of tuning is supplied in the config file.
8. Try running one benchmark with the test dataset
Test that you can run a benchmark, using the minimal input set - the "test" workload. For example:
$ runspec --config=Khushboo-macosx.cfg --size=test --noreportable --tune=base \ --iterations=1 bzip2
The "\" above indicates that the command is continued on the next line. The "--noreportable" ensures that the tools will allow us to run just a single benchmark instead of the whole suite, and "--iterations=1" says just run the benchmark once.
Check the results in
9. Try a real dataset
Test that you can run a benchmark using the real input set - the "reference" workload. For example:
$ runspec --config=Khushboo-macosx.cfg --size=ref \
--noreportable --tune=base --iterations=1 bzip2
Check the results in
10. Try a full (reportable) run
If everything has worked up to this point, you may wish to start a
full run, perhaps leaving your computer to run overnight. The
extended test will demand significant resources from your machine,
including computational power and memory of several types. In order
to avoid surprises, before starting the reportable run, you should
review the section
Have a look at
The command
To run a reportable run of the integer suite with simple (baseline) tuning:
C:\cpu2006>
Example Installation
Here is a complete Linux installation, with interspersed commentary. This example follows the steps listed above. We assume that Steps 1 through 3 are already complete (the pre-requisites are met, we have enough space, the DVD is mounted).
Step 4: Set the current working directory to the DVD:
$ cd /media/SPEC_CPU2006
Step 5: Invoke install.sh. When prompted, we enter the destination directory:
$ ./install.sh
SPEC CPU2006 Installation
Top of the CPU2006 tree is '/media/SPEC_CPU2006'
Enter the directory you wish to install to (e.g. /usr/cpu2006)
/cpu2006
Installing FROM /media/SPEC_CPU2006
Installing TO /cpu2006
Is this correct? (Please enter 'yes' or 'no')
yes
The following toolset is expected to work on your platform. If the
automatically installed one does not work, please re-run install.sh and
exclude that toolset using the '-e' switch.
The toolset selected will not affect your benchmark scores.
linux-suse10-amd64 For 64-bit AMD64/EM64T Linux systems running
SuSE Linux 10 or later.
Built on SuSE Linux 10 with
GCC v4.1.0 (SUSE Linux)
=================================================================
Attempting to install the linux-suse10-amd64 toolset...
Unpacking CPU2006 base files (129.8 MB)
Unpacking 400.perlbench benchmark and data files (61.5 MB)
Unpacking 401.bzip2 benchmark and data files (110.7 MB)
Unpacking 403.gcc benchmark and data files (43 MB)
Unpacking 410.bwaves benchmark and data files (0.1 MB)
Unpacking 416.gamess benchmark and data files (16.8 MB)
Unpacking 429.mcf benchmark and data files (6.9 MB)
Unpacking 433.milc benchmark and data files (0.6 MB)
Unpacking 434.zeusmp benchmark and data files (1.1 MB)
Unpacking 435.gromacs benchmark and data files (13 MB)
Unpacking 436.cactusADM benchmark and data files (3.3 MB)
Unpacking 437.leslie3d benchmark and data files (0.3 MB)
Unpacking 444.namd benchmark and data files (7.6 MB)
Unpacking 445.gobmk benchmark and data files (9.2 MB)
Unpacking 447.dealII benchmark and data files (70.2 MB)
Unpacking 450.soplex benchmark and data files (321 MB)
Unpacking 453.povray benchmark and data files (10.3 MB)
Unpacking 454.calculix benchmark and data files (26 MB)
Unpacking 456.hmmer benchmark and data files (57 MB)
Unpacking 458.sjeng benchmark and data files (0.4 MB)
Unpacking 459.GemsFDTD benchmark and data files (2.6 MB)
Unpacking 462.libquantum benchmark and data files (0.2 MB)
Unpacking 464.h264ref benchmark and data files (52.9 MB)
Unpacking 465.tonto benchmark and data files (6.9 MB)
Unpacking 470.lbm benchmark and data files (4.7 MB)
Unpacking 471.omnetpp benchmark and data files (2.8 MB)
Unpacking 473.astar benchmark and data files (5.8 MB)
Unpacking 481.wrf benchmark and data files (67.1 MB)
Unpacking 482.sphinx3 benchmark and data files (51.7 MB)
Unpacking 483.xalancbmk benchmark and data files (213.7 MB)
Unpacking 998.specrand benchmark and data files (4.1 MB)
Unpacking 999.specrand benchmark and data files (4.1 MB)
Checking the integrity of your source tree...
Checksums are all okay.
Unpacking binary tools for linux-suse10-amd64...
Checking the integrity of your binary tools...
Checksums are all okay.
Testing the tools installation (this may take a minute)
........................................................................o.....................................
............................................................................................................
Installation successful. Source the shrc or cshrc in
/cpu2006
to set up your environment for the benchmark.
Step 6: Now, we change the current working directory from the
install media to the location of the new SPEC CPU2006 tree. Since
this user has a a Bourne compatible
shell,
Next, the config file
(Note that the term "amd64" in the config file name does not designate a chip from a particular manufacturer; rather, it designates an instruction set, variously known as "amd64", "EM64T", and "x86_64". The config file is an OK starting point for this SUT.)
$ cd /cpu2006/
$ . ./shrc
$ cd config
$ cp Example-linux64-amd64-gcc43+.cfg mytest.cfg
$ runspec --config=mytest.cfg --action=build --tune=base bzip2
runspec v6545 - Copyright 1999-2011 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Using 'linux-suse10-amd64' tools
Reading MANIFEST... 22464 files
Loading runspec modules................
Locating benchmarks...found 31 benchmarks in 6 benchsets.
Reading config file '/cpu2006/config/mytest.cfg'
Running "specperl /cpu2006/Docs/sysinfo" to gather system information.
Loading "http://www.spec.org/auto/cpu2006/current_version" for version check: OK
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-gcc4x-flags-revA.xml)...
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-linux-platform-revA.xml)...
Benchmarks selected: 401.bzip2
Compiling Binaries
Building 401.bzip2 base gcc43-64bit default: (build_base_gcc43-64bit.0000)
specmake clean 2> make.clean.err | tee make.clean.out
rm -rf *.o byoudoin.jpg.out input.combined.out input.program.out
find . \( -name \*.o -o -name '*.fppized.f*' -o -name '*.i' -o -name '*.mod' \) -print | xargs rm -rf
rm -rf bzip2
rm -rf bzip2.exe
rm -rf core
rm -rf
specmake build 2> make.err | tee make.out
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o spec.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 spec.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o blocksort.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 blocksort.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o bzip2.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 bzip2.c
bzip2.c: In function 'compressStream':
bzip2.c:484: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
bzip2.c:487: warning: assignment makes integer from pointer without a cast
bzip2.c: In function 'uncompressStream':
bzip2.c:611: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
bzip2.c:614: warning: assignment makes integer from pointer without a cast
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o bzlib.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 bzlib.c
bzlib.c: In function 'BZ2_bzWriteOpen':
bzlib.c:996: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
bzlib.c: In function 'BZ2_bzReadOpen':
bzlib.c:1172: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
bzlib.c: In function 'bzopen_or_bzdopen':
bzlib.c:1512: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
bzlib.c:1521: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o compress.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 compress.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o crctable.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 crctable.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o decompress.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 decompress.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o huffman.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 huffman.c
/usr/bin/gcc -c -o randtable.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 randtable.c
/usr/bin/gcc -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 spec.o blocksort.o bzip2.o bzlib.o compress.o
crctable.o decompress.o huffman.o randtable.o -o bzip2
specmake options 2> options.err | tee options.out
COMP: /usr/bin/gcc -c -o options.o -DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64
C: CC="/usr/bin/gcc"
C: COBJOPT="-c -o options"
P: CPUFLAGS="-DSPEC_CPU -DNDEBUG"
P: BENCH_FLAGS=""
P: BENCH_CFLAGS=""
O: OPTIMIZE=""
O: COPTIMIZE="-O2 -fno-strict-aliasing"
P: PORTABILITY="-DSPEC_CPU_LP64"
P: CPORTABILITY=""
O: EXTRA_CFLAGS=""
O: EXTRA_OPTIMIZE=""
O: EXTRA_COPTIMIZE=""
P: EXTRA_PORTABILITY=""
P: EXTRA_CPORTABILITY=""
LINK: /usr/bin/gcc -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -DSPEC_CPU_LP64 -o options
C: LD="/usr/bin/gcc"
O: COPTIMIZE="-O2 -fno-strict-aliasing"
P: PORTABILITY="-DSPEC_CPU_LP64"
C: LDOUT="-o options"
Build successes: 401.bzip2(base) <<-- what we want to see
Build Complete
The log for this run is in /cpu2006/result/CPU2006.001.log
runspec finished at Wed Jul 6 22:30:27 2011; 12 total seconds elapsed
Just above, various compile and link commands may or may not be echoed to your screen, depending on the settings in your config file. At this point, we've accomplished a lot. The SPEC tree is installed, and we have verified that a benchmark can be compiled using the C compiler. (The sharp-eyed reader may notice some warnings above about casts of pointers. These warnings from the compiler have been reviewed by SPEC's project leader for 401.bzip2, who has determined that they will not affect operation of the benchmark.)
Step 8: Now try running a benchmark, using the minimal test workload. The test workload runs in a tiny amount of time and does a minimal verification that the benchmark executable can at least start up:
$ runspec --config=mytest.cfg --size=test --noreportable --tune=base --iterations=1 bzip2
runspec v6545 - Copyright 1999-2011 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Using 'linux-suse10-amd64' tools
Reading MANIFEST... 22464 files
Loading runspec modules................
Locating benchmarks...found 31 benchmarks in 6 benchsets.
Reading config file '/cpu2006/config/mytest.cfg'
Running "specperl /cpu2006/Docs/sysinfo" to gather system information.
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-gcc4x-flags-revA.xml)...
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-linux-platform-revA.xml)...
Benchmarks selected: 401.bzip2
Compiling Binaries
Up to date 401.bzip2 base gcc43-64bit default
Setting Up Run Directories
Setting up 401.bzip2 test base gcc43-64bit default: created (run_base_test_gcc43-64bit.0000)
Running Benchmarks
Running 401.bzip2 test base gcc43-64bit default
/cpu2006/bin/specinvoke -d /cpu2006/benchspec/CPU2006/401.bzip2/run/run_base_test_gcc43-64bit.0000
-e speccmds.err -o speccmds.stdout -f speccmds.cmd -C -q
/cpu2006/bin/specinvoke -E -d /cpu2006/benchspec/CPU2006/401.bzip2/run/run_base_test_gcc43-64bit.0000 -c 1
-e compare.err -o compare.stdout -f compare.cmd
Success: 1x401.bzip2 <<-- what we want to see
Producing Raw Reports
mach: default
ext: gcc43-64bit
size: test
set: int
format: raw -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.rsf
Parsing flags for 401.bzip2 base: done
Doing flag reduction: done
format: flags -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.flags.html
format: ASCII -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.txt
format: CSV -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.csv
format: HTML -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.html, /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.002.test.gif
set: fp
The log for this run is in /cpu2006/result/CPU2006.002.log
runspec finished at Wed Jul 6 22:35:27 2011; 21 total seconds elapsed
Notice about 20 lines up the notation "Success: 1x401.bzip2". That is what we want to see.
Step 9: let's try running bzip2 with the real workload. This will take a while, over 11 minutes on the tested laptop running Linux.
$ runspec --config=mytest.cfg --size=ref --noreportable --tune=base --iterations=1 bzip2
runspec v6545 - Copyright 1999-2011 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Using 'linux-suse10-amd64' tools
Reading MANIFEST... 22464 files
Loading runspec modules................
Locating benchmarks...found 31 benchmarks in 6 benchsets.
Reading config file '/cpu2006/config/mytest.cfg'
Running "specperl /cpu2006/Docs/sysinfo" to gather system information.
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-gcc4x-flags-revA.xml)...
Retrieving flags file (/cpu2006/config/flags/Example-linux-platform-revA.xml)...
Benchmarks selected: 401.bzip2
Compiling Binaries
Up to date 401.bzip2 base gcc43-64bit default
Setting Up Run Directories
Setting up 401.bzip2 ref base gcc43-64bit default: created (run_base_ref_gcc43-64bit.0000)
Running Benchmarks
Running 401.bzip2 ref base gcc43-64bit default
/cpu2006/bin/specinvoke -d
/cpu2006/benchspec/CPU2006/401.bzip2/run/run_base_ref_gcc43-64bit.0000 -e speccmds.err
-o speccmds.stdout -f speccmds.cmd -C -q
/cpu2006/bin/specinvoke -E -d
/cpu2006/benchspec/CPU2006/401.bzip2/run/run_base_ref_gcc43-64bit.0000 -c 1 -e compare.err
-o compare.stdout -f compare.cmd
Success: 1x401.bzip2 <<-- what we want to see
Producing Raw Reports
mach: default
ext: gcc43-64bit
size: ref
set: int
format: raw -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.rsf
Parsing flags for 401.bzip2 base: done
Doing flag reduction: done
format: flags -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.flags.html
format: ASCII -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.txt
format: CSV -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.csv
format: HTML -> /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.html, /cpu2006/result/CINT2006.003.ref.gif
set: fp
The log for this run is in /cpu2006/result/CPU2006.003.log
runspec finished at Thu Jul 7 09:44:53 2011; 684 total seconds elapsed
$
Success with the real workload! So now let's look in the result directory and see what we find:
$ cd result $ ls CINT2006.002.test.csv CINT2006.003.ref.csv CPU2006.001.log CINT2006.002.test.flags.html CINT2006.003.ref.flags.html CPU2006.002.log CINT2006.002.test.gif CINT2006.003.ref.gif CPU2006.003.log CINT2006.002.test.html CINT2006.003.ref.html invalid.gif CINT2006.002.test.rsf CINT2006.003.ref.rsf lock.CPU2006 CINT2006.002.test.txt CINT2006.003.ref.txt $ grep runspec: *log CPU2006.001.log:runspec: runspec --config=mytest.cfg --action=build --tune=base bzip2 CPU2006.002.log:runspec: runspec --config=mytest.cfg --size=test --noreportable --tune=base --iterations=1 bzip2 CPU2006.003.log:runspec: runspec --config=mytest.cfg --size=ref --noreportable --tune=base --iterations=1 bzip2 $
Notice the three separate sets of files: .001, .002, and .003
CPU2006.001.log
CPU2006.002.log
CPU2006.003.log
Here is the
complete
$ cat CINT2006.003.ref.txt
##############################################################################
# INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN #
# #
# 'reportable' flag not set during run #
# 471.omnetpp (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 456.hmmer (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 445.gobmk (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 458.sjeng (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 429.mcf (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 473.astar (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 483.xalancbmk (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 400.perlbench (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 464.h264ref (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 462.libquantum (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 401.bzip2 (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 403.gcc (base) did not have enough runs! #
# #
# INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN #
##############################################################################
SPEC(R) CINT2006 Summary
System Vendor System Model Name
Test Sponsor: Test Sponsor (Optional, defaults to hw_vendor)
Thu Jul 7 09:33:29 2011
CPU2006 License: 0 Test date: Jul-2011
Test sponsor: Test Sponsor (Optional, defaults to hw_vendor) Hardware availability: Dec-9999
Tested by: (Optional, defaults to hw_vendor) Software availability: May-2010
Estimated Estimated
Base Base Base Peak Peak Peak
Benchmarks Ref. Run Time Ratio Ref. Run Time Ratio
-------------- ------ --------- --------- ------ --------- ---------
400.perlbench NR
401.bzip2 9650 666 14.5 *
403.gcc NR
429.mcf NR
445.gobmk NR
456.hmmer NR
458.sjeng NR
462.libquantum NR
464.h264ref NR
471.omnetpp NR
473.astar NR
483.xalancbmk NR
==============================================================================
400.perlbench NR
401.bzip2 9650 666 14.5 *
403.gcc NR
429.mcf NR
445.gobmk NR
456.hmmer NR
458.sjeng NR
462.libquantum NR
464.h264ref NR
471.omnetpp NR
473.astar NR
483.xalancbmk NR
Est. SPECint(R)_base2006 --
Est. SPECint2006 Not Run
HARDWARE
--------
CPU Name: Intel Core i5 M 520
CPU Characteristics:
CPU MHz: 9999
FPU: Integrated
CPU(s) enabled: 2 cores, 1 chip, 2 cores/chip, 2 threads/core
CPU(s) orderable: 1,2 chips
Primary Cache: 9999 KB I + 9999 KB D on chip per core
Secondary Cache: 9999 KB I+D on chip per core
L3 Cache: 9999 MB I+D on chip per chip
Other Cache: None
Memory: 3.666 GB fixme: If using DDR3, format is:
'N GB (M x N GB nRxn PCn-nnnnnR-n, ECC)'
Disk Subsystem: 77 GB add more disk info here
Other Hardware: None
SOFTWARE
--------
Operating System: Oracle Linux Server release 6.0
2.6.32-100.28.5.el6.x86_64
Compiler: gcc, g++ & gfortran 4.3.4
Auto Parallel: No
File System: ext4
System State: Run level 5 (add definition here)
Base Pointers: 64-bit
Peak Pointers: 64-bit
Other Software: None
Submit Notes
------------
'numactl' was used to bind copies to the cores.
See the configuration file for details.
Operating System Notes
----------------------
'ulimit -s unlimited' was used to set environment stack size
Platform Notes
--------------
Sysinfo program (/cpu2006/Docs/sysinfo)
on jhenning-t410-oel Thu Jul 7 09:33:31 2011
This section contains SUT (System Under Test) info as seen by
some common utilities. To remove or add to this section, see:
http://www.spec.org/cpu2006/Docs/config.html#sysinfo
From /proc/cpuinfo
model name : Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 520 @ 2.40GHz
1 chips
physical 0: cores 0 2
4 threads
cache size : 3072 KB
From /proc/meminfo
MemTotal: 3844200 kB
HugePages_Total: 0
Hugepagesize: 2048 kB
/usr/bin/lsb_release -d
Oracle Linux Server release 6.0
From /etc/*release* /etc/*version*
oracle-release: Oracle Linux Server release 6.0
redhat-release: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.0 (Santiago)
system-release: Oracle Linux Server release 6.0
system-release-cpe: cpe:/o:oracle:oracle_linux:6server:ga:server
uname -a:
Linux jhenning-t410-oel 2.6.32-100.28.5.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Feb 2 18:40:23
EST 2011 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
run-level 5 Jul 6 20:30
SPEC is set to: /home/jhenning/cpu2006/kit117
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/vg_oel6-lv_root
ext4 77G 7.2G 66G 10% /
(End of data from sysinfo program)
Base Compiler Invocation
------------------------
C benchmarks:
401.bzip2: /usr/bin/gcc
Base Portability Flags
----------------------
401.bzip2: -DSPEC_CPU_LP64
Base Optimization Flags
-----------------------
C benchmarks:
401.bzip2: -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing
Base Other Flags
----------------
C benchmarks:
401.bzip2: No flags used
SPEC and SPECint are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance
Evaluation Corporation. All other brand and product names appearing
in this result are trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective holders.
##############################################################################
# INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN #
# #
# 'reportable' flag not set during run #
# 471.omnetpp (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 456.hmmer (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 445.gobmk (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 458.sjeng (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 429.mcf (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 473.astar (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 483.xalancbmk (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 400.perlbench (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 464.h264ref (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 462.libquantum (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 401.bzip2 (base) did not have enough runs! #
# 403.gcc (base) did not have enough runs! #
# #
# INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN -- INVALID RUN #
##############################################################################
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
For questions about this result, please contact the tester.
For other inquiries, please contact webmaster@spec.org.
Copyright 2006-2011 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Tested with SPEC CPU2006 v117.
Report generated on Thu Jul 7 09:44:53 2011 by CPU2006 ASCII formatter v6400.
Done. The suite is installed, and we can run at least one benchmark for real (see the report of the time spent in 401.bzip2 above).
Appendix 1: the DVD drive is on system A, but I want to install on system B. What do I do?
If the title of this section describes your situation, you basically have two choices.
- Network mount: You can mount the device over the network and do the installation remotely.
- Tar file: You can install from the tar file
1. Network mount
You might be able to mount the DVD on one system and use network services to make it available on other systems.
Please note that the SPEC
CPU2006 license agreement does not allow you to post the DVD on any
public server.
Whether you attempt a network mount will probably depend on:
- available network hardware,
- the networking services provided by your operating system, and
- the security policies of your IT department (if any).
If your network environment allows easy cross-system mounting, or
if you feel brave about reading manpages, you can use a network
mount for the installation. Otherwise, you can fall back
on
Network mount, easy:
for example, System A Solaris/Opteron
Your operating system may be configured to automatically mount the drive and automatically make it visible to other network systems, or may make it visible with minimal user intervention. During one set of testing, system A (with the DVD drive) was an Opteron-based system running Solaris 10. The SPEC CPU2006 DVD was inserted. The operating system mounted it automatically, and from a terminal window, a (non-privileged) user entered the Solaris
command to make it visible to other hosts.
On System B, a Solaris SPARC system, a non-privileged user typed:
cd /net/systemA/cdrom/spec_cpu2006 ./install.sh
and the installation proceeded normally, picking up
from
Network mount, medium difficulty:
for example, System A Solaris/Opteron
Subsequent to the tests of the previous paragraphs, the DVD drive on System A (Solaris/Opteron) was also visible to a system running Compaq Tru64 UNIX V5.1A. But in this case, a little assistance was needed from the privileged (root) account on system B:
echo "systemA.domain.com:/cdrom/spec_cpu2006 /systemA nfs ro,bg,soft 0 0" >> /etc/fstab mkdir /systemA /usr/sbin/mount /systemA
Then, the non-privileged user was able to say:
cd /systemA ./install.sh
and once again the installation proceeded normally, picking up
from
Network mount, a bit harder:
for example, System A SuSE/x86
The SPEC CPU2006 DVD was also inserted into a system running SuSE Linux 9.0, and used from a Mac OS X PowerBook. On both these systems, there are probably automatic tools that would have accomplished the following more quickly, but the tester happened to read the manpages in the particular order that he happened to read them in. The following succeeded:
On System A, root added
/dev/cdrom /cd iso9660 ro,user,noauto,unhide
to
/cd 192.168.0.0/24(ro,insecure,no_root_squash,sync)
to
exportfs -r rpc.nfsd -p 8 rpc.mountd cat /var/lib/nfs/etab
On System B, root typed:
mkdir /remote mount -t nfs 192.168.0.106:/cd /remote
Finally, the user typed
cd /remote ./install.sh
and installation continued as normal,
with
2. Tar file
If the DVD drive is on a system other than the one where you wish
to do the installation, and if you do not wish to try to get
a
-
Go to the system with the DVD drive ("System A"). Insert the SPEC CPU2006 DVD, and, if required, issue a
mount command. -
From a terminal window (aka command window),
cd to the top level directory on the DVD. -
You are going to retrieve five things from the DVD. First, find the large tarfile and its corresponding md5 file:
cd install_archives ls -l cpu2006.tar.xz*
or, if System A is a Windows system, then:
cd install_archives dir cpu2006.tar.xz*
In either case, you should see one moderately large file > 500MB,
cpu2006.tar.xz, and a small file associated with it that contains a checksum, cpu2006.tar.xz.md5. If you don't see the above files, try looking for
cpu*tar*. The name might change if, for example, a maintenance update of SPEC CPU2006 changes the name slightly to indicate an updated version. Do whatever is required in order to transfer both files intact to the system where you wish to do the installation ("System B"). If you use
ftp, do not forget to use image (binary) mode. For example: $ ftp ftp> op systemB Name: imauser Password: ftp> cd /kits ftp> bin <-------- important 200 Type set to I. ftp> put cpu2006.tar.xz ftp> put cpu2006.tar.xz.md5Please note that the SPEC CPU2006 license agreement does not allow you to post the above file on any public ftp server.
If your institution has a SPEC CPU2006 license, then it's fine to post it on an internal server that is accessible only to members of your institution. -
Next, you are going to look on the DVD for versions of
specxz, specmd5sum, and spectar that are compatible with system B. Please do not use the tar supplied by your operating system unless you are sure that it can handle long path names. Many commonly-supplied tar utilities cannnot. Please do not use Windows Zip utilities, as these will not preserve line endings.
If you have GNU tar and the genuine xz, then you can use those; otherwise, please hunt around on the DVD to find prebuilt versions that are compatible with your environment, like so:
$ cd /media/SPEC_CPU2006/ $ cd tools/bin $ ls aix5L-ppc linux-debian31-ppc linux-suse10-ia32 solaris10-x86 aix5L-ppc64 linux-redhat72-ia32 linux-suse10-ppc64 solaris-sparc hpux11iv31-parisc linux-rhas4r4-ia64 macosx solaris-x86 hpux11iv3-ipf linux-sles9-ia64 macosx-ppc tru64-alpha irix6.5-mips linux-suse10-amd64 solaris10-sparc windows-i386 $ cd aix5L-ppc $ cat description For PowerPC systems running AIX 5L V5.3 or later Built on AIX 5L 5300-02 with the IBM XL C/C++ for AIX V9.0.0.25 compiler $ ls -g spec* -r-xr-xr-x. 1 imauser 47596 Apr 22 18:30 specmd5sum -r-xr-xr-x. 1 imauser 537176 Apr 22 18:29 spectar -r-xr-xr-x. 1 imauser 233777 Apr 22 18:29 specxz $Once you've found the right versions of
specxz, specmd5sum, and spectar for the system where you intend to install (system B), transfer them to system B using the same methods that you used for the big tarfile. -
On system B, use
specmd5sum to check that the file transfer worked correctly. In this example, we assume that you have placed all 5 of the files mentioned above in the /kits directory: $ cd /kits $ chmod +x spec* $ specmd5sum -c cpu2006.tar.xz.md5 cpu2006.tar.xz: OK
-
Unpack the tarfile, like so:
$ cd /mybigdisk $ mkdir cpu2006 $ cd cpu2006 $ /kits/specxz -dc /kits/cpu2006.tar.xz | /kits/spectar -xf -
Be patient: it will take a bit of time to unpack! It might take 15 minutes, depending on the speed of your processor and disks. Go for a coffee break.
-
Now, at last, type
./install.sh and pick up with step 5, above. Your output will be similar, but not identical, to the output shown in step 5 above: you won't see the "Unpacking xxxx" messages, because you already did the unpacking. Note that the directory where you unpack the tarfile will be the directory you install FROM and also the directory you install TO.
This is normal, and expected, for a tarfile installation. You will see a question similar to this:
Installing FROM /mybigdisk/cpu2006 Installing TO /mybigdisk/cpu2006 Is this correct? (Please enter 'yes' or 'no') yes
If you enter "no", installation will stop. If you try to install TO another directory, using the
-d flag, the installation will not succeed when using the tar file method.
Appendix 2: Uninstalling SPEC CPU2006
At this time, SPEC does not provide an uninstall utility for SPEC
CPU2006. Confusingly, there
To remove SPEC CPU2006 on Windows systems, select the top directory in Windows Explorer and delete it.
To remove SPEC CPU2006 on Unix systems,
use
rm -Rf /home/cs3000/saturos/spec/cpu2006
If you have been using the
Windows:
cd %SPEC%\config
findstr output_root *cfg
Unix:
cd $SPEC/config
grep output_root *cfg
Note: instead of deleting the entire directory tree, some users
find it useful to keep
the
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