On 2020-04-09 11:26, dalios wrote:
Hi list!
I just purchased new RAM for my Debian Stable running PC to upgrade its
performance. I currently have 4GB and the new one is 8GB so I will have
12GB total.
My question is this: is there a tool in the repositories which I can use
to measure the system's performance with 4GB and then with 12GB of RAM
in order to see if it was a worthy choice?
Thanks in advance,
Dalios
As Roberto pointed out, hardware configuration is critical for memory
performance. If you would care to post your computer or motherboard
make/ model, your memory module quantities/ makes/ part numbers, and
your installation configuration (which modules are installed in which
slots), people on this list can double-check.
I have been using Memtest86+, and it's predecessor Memtest86, for many
years. In addition to testing memory, Memtest86+ also displays
fundamental memory information and metrics. Once you know your modules
are configured correctly, I suggest that run Memtest86+ for 24 hours to
confirm everything is working correctly:
http://www.memtest.org/
I have also been using using dbench for many years, primarily to test
disks and arrays. It might measure some difference between 4 GB vs. 12
GB of memory, but I would expect disk I/O to dominate:
https://dbench.samba.org/
There are other benchmarking tools available as Debian packages:
2020-04-09 13:02:34 dpchrist@tinkywinky ~
$ apt-cache search benchmark
Beyond that, and also as Roberto pointed out, your workload will
determine what benchmarks have the most meaning. But in general, adding
memory increases overall performance. Tripling your memory for $40
should be a worthwhile upgrade. You should notice it when you run a
graphical desktop and open a lot of applications/ tabs.
David