Quick, Standard Measurement for CPU Power?
captnitro asks: "A particular research project I'm developing right now needs to compare 'potential' (idle/none) and 'load' for various hardware capabilities, and quickly -- maybe up to a several times every minute. For disk space, for RAM, it's relatively easy -- find what's used and what's not and report the ratio. For CPU, I have plenty of time to test 'potential' when the app starts. But for testing CPU load, I need a standard 'ruler' that will be able to compare across varying platforms and processors (e.g., x86, PowerPC, embedded, single and multi-proc) -- so for example, idle percentage won't work. At the same time, I don't have the ability to time 'openssl speed' every 25 seconds without bringing the system to a halt. I'm willing to sacrifice precision of the measurement for generalization of the unit -- that is, the operations that this test is for would be primarily mathematical and not say, text sorts -- but I'd prefer a generic, quick test of the current processor load rather than an average of 25 different tests. Regardless of hardware, the OS distribution is mostly *nix-based -- NetBSD, Linux, and even Mac OS X. Wild ideas are perfectly acceptable -- any thoughts?"
I am not even sure there is a way of measuring what you want. There are so many variables (Disk I/O, memory bandwidth, etc.) that you can't get a reasonable measurement of how much CPU is left over to do useful work for your process.
The other thing is that many things can take down a CPU as well - a huge burst of network traffic can take an "idle" CPU and peg it at 100% in kernal usage.
Your best bet would probably be to hook into the various schedulers and get deep knowledge of what is really going on - pain in the butt, but doable
I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them
It sounds like you are looking for a way to normalize and compare system (and application?) performance across different hardware platforms.
Say hello to SPEC. This is exactly what the organization was formed for. Take a look at their CPU benchmarks. I know you're looking for more of a snapshot, and less of a benchmark - but I would think SPEC is a good place to start.