New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

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  • Jorge

    New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

    Webkit r34469 vs. Opera 9.50 :

    3.00x as fast 6339.6ms(Opera) 2109.8ms (Webkit)

    -----

    FF3.0 (final) vs. Opera 9.50 :

    1.94x as fast 6339.6ms (Opera) 3269.6ms (FF3)

    -----

    Webkit r34469 vs. FF3.0 (final) :

    1.55x as fast 3269.6ms(FF3) 2109.8ms(Webkit )

    -----



    --Jorge.
  • Lasse Reichstein Nielsen

    #2
    Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

    Jorge <jorge@jorgecha morro.comwrites :
    3.00x as fast 6339.6ms(Opera) 2109.8ms (Webkit)
    ....
    1.94x as fast 6339.6ms (Opera) 3269.6ms (FF3)
    ....
    1.55x as fast 3269.6ms(FF3) 2109.8ms(Webkit )
    ....Numbers on their own are meaningless. What were the configurations
    used to perform the test? OS, CPU, etc? Any other pages open in the
    browser? Was Opera's mail client enabled? Was WebKit used in
    a browser (e.g. Safari) or run as a GUI-less batch job?

    And sorry, but I don't trust a benchmark hosted on the site of the one
    performing best at that benchmark. For all we know, Webkit could have
    been microoptimized for exactly the tested tasks, and suck at
    everything else. Probably not, but it wouldn't be the first time
    something like that happened.
    Is the sunspider test suite available for download and perusal, or
    should we just read the page source?

    /L
    --
    Lasse Reichstein Nielsen - lrn@hotpop.com
    DHTML Death Colors: <URL:http://www.infimum.dk/HTML/rasterTriangleD OM.html>
    'Faith without judgement merely degrades the spirit divine.'

    Comment

    • Gregor Kofler

      #3
      Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

      Jorge meinte:
      Webkit r34469 vs. FF3.0 (final) :
      >
      1.55x as fast 3269.6ms(FF3) 2109.8ms(Webkit )
      Safari 3.1.1 vs. FF3 (WinXP): 4909ms vs. 5602ms

      Anyway, how useful is a JS benchmark nowadays, which deliberately leaves
      out DOM perfomance? Since the benchmark is by Apple, I don't expect
      anything but "lightning fast" performance by their in-house browser.

      Gregor




      --
      http://photo.gregorkofler.at ::: Landschafts- und Reisefotografie
      http://web.gregorkofler.com ::: meine JS-Spielwiese
      http://www.image2d.com ::: Bildagentur für den alpinen Raum

      Comment

      • Jorge

        #4
        Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

        On Jun 18, 10:13 am, Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <l...@hotpop.co mwrote:
        Numbers on their own are meaningless.
        Why ? The results show that it runs x times faster/slower on my
        computer.
        All the browsers were tested on the same computer.
        What were the configurations
        used to perform the test? OS, CPU, etc? Any other pages open in the
        browser?  Was Opera's mail client enabled? Was WebKit used in
        a browser (e.g. Safari) or run as a GUI-less batch job?
        Browser : a browser is a browser. Webkit is a browser as well.
        Open the browser, run the test. That's it. Nothing special. Try it
        yourself.
        >
        And sorry, but I don't trust a benchmark hosted on the site of the one
        performing best at that benchmark. For all we know, Webkit could have
        been microoptimized for exactly the tested tasks, and suck at
        everything else. Probably not, but it wouldn't be the first time
        something like that happened.
        Is the sunspider test suite available for download and perusal, or
        should we just read the page source?
        >
        Hey, what's up ?
        Take it easy...

        Thanks,
        --Jorge.

        Comment

        • Jorge

          #5
          Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

          On Jun 18, 10:12 am, Gregor Kofler <use...@gregork ofler.atwrote:
          Anyway, how useful is a JS benchmark nowadays, which deliberately leaves
          out DOM perfomance?
          Is JS core performance a don't care, then ?
          Since the benchmark is by Apple, I don't expect
          anything but "lightning fast" performance by their in-house browser.
          Not so.
          They must have been working hard lately,
          these tests show no lightning-fast-performance here : look :



          That was in February. 15 days later :



          And today we are where we are :

          Webkit r34469 vs. FF3.0 (final) :
          1.55x as fast 3269.6ms(FF3) 2109.8ms(Webkit )

          --Jorge.

          Comment

          • Gregor Kofler

            #6
            Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

            Jorge meinte:
            On Jun 18, 10:12 am, Gregor Kofler <use...@gregork ofler.atwrote:
            >
            >Anyway, how useful is a JS benchmark nowadays, which deliberately leaves
            >out DOM perfomance?
            >
            Is JS core performance a don't care, then ?
            No. But only a fraction of the speed of a JS application running in a
            browser window will be contributed by the core performance. Typical "Web
            2.0" applications rely heavily on DOM performance.
            >Since the benchmark is by Apple, I don't expect
            >anything but "lightning fast" performance by their in-house browser.
            >
            Not so.
            They must have been working hard lately,
            these tests show no lightning-fast-performance here : look :
            >

            >
            That was in February. 15 days later :
            >

            >
            And today we are where we are :
            >
            Webkit r34469 vs. FF3.0 (final) :
            1.55x as fast 3269.6ms(FF3) 2109.8ms(Webkit )
            One could argue, that they've tweaked their browser to outperform
            competitors with their home-made benchmark...
            Anyway, on WinXP the current Safari version is 10 to 15% faster than FF3
            running a benchmark that measures core JS performance. IMO nothing to
            write home about.

            Gregor


            --
            http://photo.gregorkofler.at ::: Landschafts- und Reisefotografie
            http://web.gregorkofler.com ::: meine JS-Spielwiese
            http://www.image2d.com ::: Bildagentur für den alpinen Raum

            Comment

            • Jorge

              #7
              Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

              On Jun 18, 11:33 am, Gregor Kofler <use...@gregork ofler.atwrote:
              Anyway, on WinXP the current Safari version is 10 to 15% faster than FF3
              running a benchmark that measures core JS performance. IMO nothing to
              write home about.
              >
              But you might be glad to learn that

              -FF is almost as fast as the fastest.

              -all of them are performing much better than before. (all but IE).

              --Jorge.

              Comment

              • Lasse Reichstein Nielsen

                #8
                Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                Jorge <jorge@jorgecha morro.comwrites :
                On Jun 18, 10:13 am, Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <l...@hotpop.co mwrote:
                >
                >Numbers on their own are meaningless.
                >
                Why ? The results show that it runs x times faster/slower on my
                computer.
                That *what* runs faster? To understand the numbers, we need to know
                how they were produced. E.g., how many other applications were running
                at the time, how many other pages were open in the same browser, etc.
                In other words, we need to be able to reproduce the setting and test
                the numbers.
                Sorry, I'm a trained scientist, pedantry is an occupational hazerd.
                All the browsers were tested on the same computer.
                Good. That's the least to require.
                >What were the configurations
                >used to perform the test? OS, CPU, etc? Any other pages open in the
                >browser?  Was Opera's mail client enabled? Was WebKit used in
                >a browser (e.g. Safari) or run as a GUI-less batch job?
                >
                Browser : a browser is a browser.
                Meh. A browser component running in a thin wrapper doesn't have the
                memory footprint or other concurrent threads to handle that a full
                fledged, highly skinnable browser+mail agent+news reader+irc
                client+download manager does.
                Webkit is a browser as well.
                Webkit, if I read correctly, is a browser component. I.e., it only
                hadles the display of the page. Safari is a browser that is build
                on Webkit, just as Internet Explorer is a browser build on the
                Microsoft Browser Component, and Firefox is build on the
                Open the browser, run the test. That's it. Nothing special. Try it
                yourself.
                If I did that on my browser, I would open a browser with 30+ tabs,
                a mail client checking mail and an IRC client connecting to a channel.
                It would be likely to give worse results than if I opened a clean profile
                with everything fancy disabled and no pages open.

                I don't know that what you did, which is why I say that the number is
                meaningless.

                You could easily have done everything perfectly, eliminating as many
                spurious influences as at all possible, but then again, you might
                not. It would be equally wrong of me to assume either, which is why I
                merely say that the numbers, by themselves, are meaningless.
                >And sorry, but I don't trust a benchmark hosted on the site of the one
                >performing best at that benchmark.
                .... [and more of the same] ...
                Hey, what's up ?
                Distrust of benchmarks, mainly :)
                I'm remembering things like

                and have a natural distrust of any benchmark that comes from the same
                source as the products that scores highest on the benchmark.
                It just smells like selective sampling. In science, procedures to avoid
                selective sampling are introduced not only to prevent cheating, but
                also, just as importantly, to remove subcontious bias.
                In that case, the producers should make a serious effort to convince
                people that is a balanced and generic benchmark. That hasn't happened
                here (to my knowledge).
                Take it easy...
                Oh, I do :)

                /L
                --
                Lasse Reichstein Nielsen - lrn@hotpop.com
                DHTML Death Colors: <URL:http://www.infimum.dk/HTML/rasterTriangleD OM.html>
                'Faith without judgement merely degrades the spirit divine.'

                Comment

                • Lasse Reichstein Nielsen

                  #9
                  Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                  Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <lrn@hotpop.com writes:

                  ....
                  on Webkit, just as Internet Explorer is a browser build on the
                  Microsoft Browser Component, and Firefox is build on the
                  >
                  Gecko browser component.

                  (Note to self: remember to finish sentences before moving on)
                  /L
                  --
                  Lasse Reichstein Nielsen - lrn@hotpop.com
                  DHTML Death Colors: <URL:http://www.infimum.dk/HTML/rasterTriangleD OM.html>
                  'Faith without judgement merely degrades the spirit divine.'

                  Comment

                  • Jorge

                    #10
                    Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                    On Jun 18, 8:26 pm, Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <l...@hotpop.co mwrote:
                    That *what* runs faster? To understand the numbers, we need to know
                    how they were produced. E.g., how many other applications were running
                    at the time, how many other pages were open in the same browser, etc.
                    In other words, we need to be able to reproduce the setting and test
                    the numbers.
                    On the same computer, in the same circumstances, open a browser, run
                    the test, close it. Open another browser, run the test, close it.
                    Repeat for the third browser. Paste in the results and note the
                    difference.

                    The numbers obtained serve very well to *compare* one browser against
                    the other. I posted : browser a ran x times faster than browser b,
                    etc.
                    That's not meaningless, I think.
                    It does not matter whether the actual number was 5000mS, what matters
                    is that 2xmS is twice as much as xmS... no ?
                    And (x times faster) applies most likely to most other computers
                    running the same OS, as well.
                    The numbers themselves are meaningless if you intend to compare them
                    against results obtained in another computer/OS/whatever, yes.

                    I'm glad to see that JS performance for the last generation of
                    browsers is several times better. Don't you ?

                    Thanks,
                    --Jorge.

                    Comment

                    • Jorge

                      #11
                      Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                      On Jun 18, 8:26 pm, Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <l...@hotpop.co mwrote:
                      Webkit, if I read correctly, is a browser component. I.e., it only
                      hadles the display of the page. Safari is a browser that is build
                      on Webkit, just as Internet Explorer is a browser build on the
                      Microsoft Browser Component, and Firefox is build on the Gecko browser.
                      The non-release versions Safari are usually called "Webkit nightly
                      builds". If you go to nightly.webkit. org what you download is there an
                      app, that is a browser, that looks and behaves like Safari, but it's
                      called WebKit not Safari (it's name is WebKit). I used the name in
                      that sense.

                      Thanks,
                      --Jorge.

                      Comment

                      • Richard Levasseur

                        #12
                        Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                        On Jun 18, 12:51 pm, Jorge <jo...@jorgecha morro.comwrote:
                        On Jun 18, 8:26 pm, Lasse Reichstein Nielsen <l...@hotpop.co mwrote:
                        >
                        Webkit, if I read correctly, is a browser component. I.e., it only
                        hadles the display of the page. Safari is a browser that is build
                        on Webkit, just as Internet Explorer is a browser build on the
                        Microsoft Browser Component, and Firefox is build on the Gecko browser.
                        >
                        The non-release versions Safari are usually called "Webkit nightly
                        builds". If you go to nightly.webkit. org what you download is there an
                        app, that is a browser, that looks and behaves like Safari, but it's
                        called WebKit not Safari (it's name is WebKit). I used the name in
                        that sense.
                        >
                        Thanks,
                        --Jorge.
                        I recently found this article: http://www.sitepen.com/blog/2008/05/...e-an-analysis/

                        I think it highlights the concerns people have expressed. Something
                        innocuous in one browser is a horrible kludge in another. JS tests
                        can be very sensitive, too. Simple things like adding a setTimeout()
                        call between test runs can make a difference.

                        That isn't to say the tests are completely useless, but saying safari
                        is 2x as opera, and 50% faster than firefox becomes questionable.
                        The best you can really do is say Safari >= FF Opera, but without
                        any quantitative measurements.

                        Richard

                        Comment

                        • Jorge

                          #13
                          Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                          On Jun 19, 10:22 am, Richard Levasseur <richard...@gma il.comwrote:
                          >
                          I recently found this article:http://www.sitepen.com/blog/2008/05/...e-an-analysis/
                          >
                          I think it highlights the concerns people have expressed.  Something
                          innocuous in one browser is a horrible kludge in another.  JS tests
                          can be very sensitive, too.  Simple things like adding a setTimeout()
                          call between test runs can make a difference.
                          >
                          And the getTime() accuracy as well. There's a browser out there that
                          increments it in 16mS steps... I heard.

                          Do you say "take it with a grain of salt" ?

                          Yes, the results shown are a mean value, and all the consequences of
                          being an average apply.
                          But if you want you can dig deeper and see "what really happenned" and
                          have a look at the invidual tests results as well :


                          =============== =============== ==============
                          RESULTS (means and 95% confidence intervals)
                          --------------------------------------------
                          Total: 2247.6ms +/- 7.6%
                          --------------------------------------------

                          3d: 321.6ms +/- 23.2%
                          cube: 106.4ms +/- 23.3%
                          morph: 109.0ms +/- 36.4%
                          raytrace: 106.2ms +/- 10.4%

                          access: 325.6ms +/- 9.0%
                          binary-trees: 39.6ms +/- 10.8%
                          fannkuch: 105.2ms +/- 4.0%
                          nbody: 143.2ms +/- 19.3%
                          nsieve: 37.6ms +/- 21.6%

                          bitops: 223.2ms +/- 4.3%
                          3bit-bits-in-byte: 33.0ms +/- 6.0%
                          bits-in-byte: 43.8ms +/- 22.7%
                          bitwise-and: 63.0ms +/- 3.9%
                          nsieve-bits: 83.4ms +/- 12.1%

                          controlflow: 24.4ms +/- 12.8%
                          recursive: 24.4ms +/- 12.8%

                          crypto: 148.8ms +/- 12.7%
                          aes: 52.0ms +/- 5.6%
                          md5: 48.6ms +/- 23.6%
                          sha1: 48.2ms +/- 10.5%

                          date: 206.8ms +/- 8.4%
                          format-tofte: 120.8ms +/- 6.0%
                          format-xparb: 86.0ms +/- 12.2%

                          math: 240.0ms +/- 13.7%
                          cordic: 82.4ms +/- 11.3%
                          partial-sums: 109.8ms +/- 15.4%
                          spectral-norm: 47.8ms +/- 15.9%

                          regexp: 214.8ms +/- 0.8%
                          dna: 214.8ms +/- 0.8%

                          string: 542.4ms +/- 1.9%
                          base64: 84.0ms +/- 1.5%
                          fasta: 95.4ms +/- 1.5%
                          tagcloud: 130.2ms +/- 2.8%
                          unpack-code: 135.8ms +/- 3.9%
                          validate-input: 97.0ms +/- 3.4%

                          There there's and empty field to paste in other browser's results so
                          that you can compare them side-by-side, line-by-line, test-by-test.

                          I doubt that the tests themselves are architected to benefit WebKit's
                          results.
                          As JS is necessarily open-source, how would you hide such a thing ?

                          Thanks,
                          --Jorge.

                          Comment

                          • Dr J R Stockton

                            #14
                            Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                            In comp.lang.javas cript message <870207f7-b830-409e-bc94-cd694ceea498@m3
                            6g2000hse.googl egroups.com>, Thu, 19 Jun 2008 02:27:01, Jorge
                            <jorge@jorgecha morro.composted :
                            >
                            >And the getTime() accuracy as well. There's a browser out there that
                            >increments it in 16mS steps... I heard.
                            Standard is that 16mS means 16 milliSiemens, which is a conductance
                            corresponding to about 63 Ohms. Doubtless you mean what should be
                            written as 16 ms - the approximate duration of one cycle of the mains in
                            hasty countries.

                            In Win98, I got intervals of 54.9 ms, rounded to 50 or 60. The
                            underlying interval in WinXP is generally 15.625 ms, rounded to 1 ms
                            unless something changes it. But in Firefox 3.0 I seem to see 1 ms
                            intervals.

                            --
                            (c) John Stockton, near London. *@merlyn.demon. co.uk/?.?.Stockton@ph ysics.org
                            Web <URL:http://www.merlyn.demo n.co.uk/- FAQish topics, acronyms, & links.
                            Correct <= 4-line sig. separator as above, a line precisely "-- " (SoRFC1036)
                            Do not Mail News to me. Before a reply, quote with ">" or "" (SoRFC1036)

                            Comment

                            • Jorge

                              #15
                              Re: New browsers : SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark Results.

                              On Jun 19, 9:25 pm, Dr J R Stockton <j...@merlyn.de mon.co.ukwrote:
                              >
                              Standard is that 16mS means 16 milliSiemens, which is a conductance
                              corresponding to about 63 Ohms.  Doubtless you mean what should be
                              written as 16 ms - the approximate duration of one cycle of the mains in
                              hasty countries.
                              >
                              Sure, yep.
                              "mS" is what I get when my brain executes
                              "milisegundos". abbreviate().to CamelCase(); :-)
                              The
                              underlying interval in WinXP is generally 15.625 ms, rounded to 1 ms
                              unless something changes it.
                              That's ~ a tick, in MacOS's tongue : TickCount().

                              --Jorge.

                              Comment

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