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184 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Wed, 27 Mar 1996 01:31:50 CET +0100
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From: Christian Spieler (IKDA, THD, D-64289 Darmstadt)
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Subject: More detailed comparison of MSDOS Info-ZIP programs' performance
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Hello all,
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In response to some additional questions and requests concerning
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my previous message about DOS performance of 16/32-bit Info-ZIP programs,
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I have produced a more detailed comparison:
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System:
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Cx486DX-40, VL-bus, 8MB; IDE hard disk;
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DOS 6.2, HIMEM, EMM386 NOEMS NOVCPI, SMARTDRV 3MB, write back.
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I have used the main directory of UnZip 5.20p as source, including the
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objects and executable of an EMX compile for unzip.exe (to supply some
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binary test files).
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Tested programs were (my current updated sources!) Zip 2.0w and UnZip 5.20p
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- 16-bit MSC 5.1, compressed with LZEXE 0.91e
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- 32-bit Watcom C 10.5, as supplied by Kai Uwe Rommel (PMODE 1.22)
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- 32-bit EMX 0.9b
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- 32-bit DJGPP v2
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- 32-bit DJGPP v1.12m4
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The EMX and DJ1 (GO32) executables were bound with the full extender, to
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create standalone executables.
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A) Tests of Zip
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Command : "<system>\zip.exe -q<#> tes.zip unz/*" (unz/*.* for Watcom!!)
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where <#> was: 0, 1, 6, 9.
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The test archive "tes.zip" was never deleted, this test
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measured "time to update archive".
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The following table contains average execution seconds (averaged over
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at least 3 runs, with the first run discarted to fill disk cache);
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numbers in parenteses specify the standard deviation of the last
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digits.
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cmpr level| 0 | 1 | 6 | 9
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===============================================================
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EMX win95 | 7.77 | 7.97 | 12.82 | 22.31
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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EMX | 7.15(40) | 8.00(6) | 12.52(25) | 20.93
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DJ2 | 13.50(32) | 14.20(7) | 19.05 | 28.48(9)
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DJ1 | 13.56(30) | 14.48(3) | 18.70 | 27.43(13)
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WAT | 6.94(22) | 8.93 | 15.73(34) | 30.25(6)
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MSC | 5.99(82) | 9.40(4) | 13.59(9) | 20.77(4)
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===============================================================
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The "EMX win95" line was created for comparison, to check the performance
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of emx 0.9 with the RSX extender in a DPMI environment. (This line was
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produced by applying the "stubbed" EMX executable in a full screen DOS box.)
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B) Tests of UnZip
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Commands : <system>\unzip.exe -qt tes.zip (testing performance)
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<system>\unzip.exe -qo tes.zip -dtm (extracting performance)
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The tes.zip archive created by maximum compression with the Zip test
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was used as example archive. Contents (archive size was 347783 bytes):
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1028492 bytes uncompressed, 337235 bytes compressed, 67%, 85 files
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The extraction directory tm was not deleted between the individual runs,
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thus this measurement checks the "overwrite all" time.
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| testing | extracting
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===================================================================
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EMX | 1.98 | 6.43(8)
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DJ2 | 2.09 | 11.85(39)
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DJ1 | 2.09 | 7.46(9)
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WAT | 2.42 | 7.10(27)
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MSC | 4.94 | 9.57(31)
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Remarks:
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The executables compiled by me were generated with all "performance"
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options enabled (ASM_CRC, and ASMV for Zip), and with full crypt support.
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For DJ1 and DJ2, the GCC options were "-O2 -m486", for EMX "-O -m486".
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The Watcom UnZip was compiled with ASM_CRC code enabled as well,
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but the Watcom Zip example was made without any optional assembler code!
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Discussion of the results:
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In overall performance, the EMX executables clearly win.
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For UnZip, emx is by far the fastest program, and the Zip performance is
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comparable to the 16-bit "reference".
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Whenever "real" work including I/O is requested, the DJGPP versions
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lose badly because of poor I/O performance, this is the case especially
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for the "newer" DJGPP v2 !!!
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(I tried to tweak with the transfer buffer size, but without any success.)
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An interesting result is that DJ v1 UnZip works remarkably better than
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DJ v2 (in contrast to Zip, where both executables' performance is
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approximately equal).
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The Watcom C programs show a clear performance deficit in the "computational
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part" (Watcom C compiler produces code that is far from optimal), but
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the extender (which is mostly responsible for the I/O throughput) seems
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to be quite fast.
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The "natural" performance deficit of the 16-bit MSC code, which can be
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clearly seen in the "testing task" comparison for UnZip, is (mostly,
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for Zip more than) compensated by the better I/O throughput (due to the
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"direct interface" between "C RTL" and "DOS services", without any mode
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switching).
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But performance is only one aspect when choosing which compiler should
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be used for official distribution:
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Sizes of the executables:
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| Zip || UnZip
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| standalone stub || standalone | stub
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======================================================================
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EMX | 143,364 (1) | 94,212 || 159,748 (1) | 110,596
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DJ2 | 118,272 (2) | -- || 124,928 (2) | --
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DJ1 | 159,744 | 88,064 || 177,152 | 105,472
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WAT | 140,073 | -- || 116,231 | --
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MSC | 49,212 (3) | -- || 45,510 (3) | --
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(1) does not run in "DPMI only" environment (Windows DOS box)
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(2) requires externally supplied DPMI server
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(3) compressed with LZexe 0.91
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Caveats/Bugs/Problems of the different extenders:
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EMX:
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- requires two different extenders to run in all DOS-compatible environments,
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EMX for "raw/himem/vcpi" and RSX for "dpmi" (Windows).
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- does not properly support time zones (no daylight savings time)
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DJv2:
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- requires an external (freely available) DPMI extender when run on plain
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DOS; this extender cannot (currently ??) be bound into the executable.
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DJv1:
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- uses up large amount of "low" dos memory (below 1M) when spawning
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another program, each instance of a DJv1 program requires its private
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GO32 extender copy in low dos memory (may be problem for the zip
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"-T" feature)
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Watcom/PMODE:
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- extended memory is allocated statically (default: ALL available memory)
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This means that a spawned program does not get any extended memory.
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You can work around this problem by setting a hard limit on the amount
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of extended memory available to the PMODE program, but this limit is
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"hard" and restricts the allocatable memory for the program itself.
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In detail:
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The Watcom zip.exe as distributed did not allow the "zip -T" feature;
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there was no extended memory left to spawn unzip.
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I could work around this problem by applying PMSETUP to change the
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amount of allocated extended memory to 2.0 MByte (I had 4MB free extended
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memory on my test system). But, this limit cannot be enlarged at
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runtime, when zip needs more memory to store "header info" while
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zipping up a huge drive, and on a system with less free memory, this
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method is not applicable, either.
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Summary:
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For Zip:
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Use the 16-bit executable whenever possible (unless you need the
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larger memory capabilities when zipping up a huge amount of files)
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As 32-bit executable, we may distribute Watcom C (after we have confirmed
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that enabling ASMV and ASM_CRC give us some better computational
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performance.)
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The alternative for 32-bit remains DJGPP v1, which shows the least problems
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(to my knowledge); v2 and EMX cannot be used because of their lack of
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"universality".
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For UnZip:
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Here, the Watcom C 32-bit executable is probably the best compromise,
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but DJ v1 could be used as well.
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And, after all, the 16-bit version does not lose badly when doing
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"real" extraction! For the SFX stub, the 16-bit version remains first
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choice because of its much smaller size!
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Best regards
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Christian Spieler
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