Measure of a computer's processing speed
Computer processing efficiency, measured as the power needed per million instructions per second (watts per MIPS)
Instructions per second (IPS ) is a measure of a computer 's processor speed. For complex instruction set computers (CISCs), different instructions take different amounts of time, so the value measured depends on the instruction mix; even for comparing processors in the same family the IPS measurement can be problematic. Many reported IPS values have represented "peak" execution rates on artificial instruction sequences with few branches and no cache contention , whereas realistic workloads typically lead to significantly lower IPS values. Memory hierarchy also greatly affects processor performance, an issue barely considered in IPS calculations. Because of these problems, synthetic benchmarks such as Dhrystone are now generally used to estimate computer performance in commonly used applications, and raw IPS has fallen into disuse.
The term is commonly used in association with a metric prefix (k, M, G, T, P, or E) to form kilo instructions per second (kIPS ), mega instructions per second (MIPS ), giga instructions per second (GIPS ) and so on. Formerly TIPS was used occasionally for "thousand IPS".
Computing
IPS can be calculated using this equation:
IPS
=
sockets
×
cores
socket
×
clock
×
Is
cycle
{\displaystyle {\text{IPS}}={\text{sockets}}\times {\frac {\text{cores}}{\text{socket}}}\times {\text{clock}}\times {\frac {\text{Is}}{\text{cycle}}}}
However, the instructions/cycle measurement depends on the instruction sequence, the data and external factors.
Thousand instructions per second (TIPS/kIPS)
Before standard benchmarks were available, average speed rating of computers was based on calculations for a mix of instructions with the results given in kilo instructions per second (kIPS). The most famous was the Gibson Mix ,[ 2] produced by Jack Clark Gibson of IBM for scientific applications in 1959.
Other ratings, such as the ADP mix which does not include floating point operations, were produced for commercial applications. The thousand instructions per second (kIPS) unit is rarely used today, as most current microprocessors can execute at least a million instructions per second.
The Gibson Mix
Gibson divided computer instructions into 12 classes, based on the IBM 704 architecture, adding a 13th class to account for indexing time. Weights were primarily based on analysis of seven scientific programs run on the 704, with a small contribution from some IBM 650 programs. The overall score was then the weighted sum of the average execution speed for instructions in each class.[ 3]
The Gibson Mix
%
1. Loads and Store
31.2
2. Fixed Point Add and Subtract
6.1
3. Compares
3.8
4. Branches
16.6
5. Floating Add and Subtract
6.9
6. Floating Multiply
3.8
7. Floating Divide
1.5
8. Fixed Point Multiply
0.6
9. Fixed Point Divide
0.2
10. Shifting
4.4
11. Logical, And, Or, etc.
1.6
12. Instructions Not Using Registers
5.3
13. Indexing
18
Total
100
Millions of instructions per second (MIPS)
The speed of a given CPU depends on many factors, such as the type of instructions being executed, the execution order and the presence of branch instructions (problematic in CPU pipelines). CPU instruction rates are different from clock frequencies, usually reported in Hz , as each instruction may require several clock cycles to complete or the processor may be capable of executing multiple independent instructions simultaneously. MIPS can be useful when comparing performance between processors made with similar architecture (e.g. Microchip branded microcontrollers), but they are difficult to compare between differing CPU architectures .[ 4] This led to the term "Meaningless Indicator of Processor Speed,"[ 5] or less commonly, "Meaningless Indices of Performance," [ 6] being popular amongst technical people by the mid-1980s.
For this reason, MIPS has become not a measure of instruction execution speed, but task performance speed compared to a reference. In the late 1970s, minicomputer performance was compared using VAX MIPS , where computers were measured on a task and their performance rated against the VAX-11/780 that was marketed as a 1 MIPS machine. (The measure was also known as the VAX Unit of Performance or VUP .) This was chosen because the 11/780 was roughly equivalent in performance to an IBM System/370 model 158–3, which was commonly accepted in the computing industry as running at 1 MIPS.
Many minicomputer performance claims were based on the Fortran version of the Whetstone benchmark , giving Millions of Whetstone Instructions Per Second (MWIPS). The VAX 11/780 with FPA (1977) runs at 1.02 MWIPS.
Effective MIPS speeds are highly dependent on the programming language used. The Whetstone Report has a table showing MWIPS speeds of PCs via early interpreters and compilers up to modern languages. The first PC compiler was for BASIC (1982) when a 4.8 MHz 8088/87 CPU obtained 0.01 MWIPS. Results on a 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (1 CPU 2007) vary from 9.7 MWIPS using BASIC Interpreter, 59 MWIPS via BASIC Compiler, 347 MWIPS using 1987 Fortran, 1,534 MWIPS through HTML/Java to 2,403 MWIPS using a modern C /C++ compiler.
For the most early 8-bit and 16-bit microprocessors , performance was measured in thousand instructions per second (1000 kIPS = 1 MIPS).
zMIPS refers to the MIPS measure used internally by IBM to rate its mainframe servers (zSeries , IBM System z9 , and IBM System z10 ).
Weighted million operations per second (WMOPS) is a similar measurement, used for audio codecs.
Timeline of instructions per second
CPU results
Processor / System
Dhrystone MIPS or MIPS, and frequency
D instructions per clock cycle
D instructions per clock cycle per core
Year
Source
UNIVAC I
0.002 MIPS at 2.25 MHz
0.0008
0.0008
1951
[ 7]
IBM 7030 ("Stretch")
1.200 MIPS at 3.30 MHz
0.364
0.364
1961
[ 8] [ 9]
CDC 6600
10.00 MIPS at 10.00 MHz
1
1
1965
[ 10] [ 11]
Intel 4004
0.092 MIPS at 0.740 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.124
0.124
1971
[ 12]
IBM System/370 Model 158
0.640 MIPS at 8.696 MHz
0.0736
0.0736
1972
[ 13]
Intel 8080
0.290 MIPS at 2.000 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.145
0.145
1974
[ 14]
Cray 1
160.0 MIPS at 80.00 MHz
2
2
1975
[ 15]
MOS Technology 6502
0.430 MIPS at 1.000 MHz
0.43
0.43
1975
[ 16]
Intel 8080A
0.435 MIPS at 3.000 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.145
0.145
1976
[ 14]
Zilog Z80
0.580 MIPS at 4.000 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.145
0.145
1976
[ 16]
Motorola 6802
0.500 MIPS at 1.000 MHz
0.5
0.5
1977
[ 17]
IBM System/370 Model 158-3
0.730 MIPS at 8.696 MHz
0.0839
0.0839
1977
[ 13]
VAX-11/780
1.000 MIPS at 5.000 MHz
0.2
0.2
1977
[ 13]
Motorola 6809
0.420 MIPS at 1.000 MHz
0.42
0.42
1978
[ 16]
Intel 8086
0.330 MIPS at 5.000 MHz
0.066
0.066
1978
[ 14]
Fujitsu MB8843
2.000 MIPS at 2.000 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
1
1
1978
[ 18]
Intel 8088
0.750 MIPS at 10.00 MHz
0.075
0.075
1979
[ 14] [failed verification ]
Motorola 68000
1.400 MIPS at 8.000 MHz
0.175
0.175
1979
[ 16]
Zilog Z8001/Z8002
1.5 MIPS at 6 MHz
0.25
0.25
1979
[ 19]
Intel 8035/8039/8048
6 MIPS at 6 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
1
1
1980
[ 20]
Fujitsu MB8843/MB8844
6 MIPS at 6 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
1
1
1980
[ 18]
Zilog Z80/Z80H
1.16 MIPS at 8 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.145
0.145
1981
[ 16] [ 21]
Motorola 6802
1.79 MIPS at 3.58 MHz
0.5
0.5
1981
[ 17] [ 22]
Zilog Z8001/Z8002B
2.5 MIPS at 10 MHz
0.25
0.25
1981
[ 19]
MOS Technology 6502
2.522 MIPS at 5.865 MHz
0.43
0.43
1981
[ 16] [ 22]
Intel 80286
1.28 MIPS at 12 MHz
0.107
0.107
1982
[ 13]
Motorola 68010
2.407 MIPS at 12.5 MHz
0.193
0.193
1982
[ 23]
NEC V20
4 MIPS at 8 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.5
0.5
1982
[ 24]
Texas Instruments TMS32010
5 MIPS at 20 MHz
0.25
0.25
1983
[ 25]
NEC V30
5 MIPS at 10 MHz (Not Dhrystone)
0.5
0.5
1983
[ 24]
Motorola 68020
4.848 MIPS at 16 MHz
0.303
0.303
1984
[ 26]
Hitachi HD63705
2 MIPS at 2 MHz
1
1
1985
[ 27] [ 28]
Intel i386DX
2.15 MIPS at 16 MHz
0.134
0.134
1985
[ 13]
Hitachi-Motorola 68HC000
3.5 MIPS at 20 MHz
0.175
0.175
1985
[ 16]
Intel 8751
1 MIPS at 12 MHz
0.083
0.083
1985
[ 29]
WDC 65C816 / Ricoh 5A22
0.22 MIPS at 2.8 MHz
0.08
0.08
1985
ARM2
4 MIPS at 8 MHz
0.5
0.5
1986
[ 30]
Stanford MIPS R2000 / R2000A
8 / 9.8 MIPS at 12.5 MHz
0.64 - 0.78
0.64 - 0.78
1986 / 1988
[ 31] [ 32]
Sun SPARC / Fujitsu MB86900
10 MIPS at 16.6 MHz
0.6
0.6
1986
[ 33]
Texas Instruments TMS34010
6 MIPS at 50 MHz
0.12
0.12
1986
[ 34]
NEC V70
6.6 MIPS at 20 MHz
0.33
0.33
1987
[ 35]
Motorola 68030
9 MIPS at 25 MHz
0.36
0.36
1987
[ 36] [ 37]
Gmicro/200
10 MIPS at 20 MHz
0.5
0.5
1987
[ 38]
Texas Instruments TMS320C20
12.5 MIPS at 25 MHz
0.5
0.5
1987
[ 39]
Analog Devices ADSP-2100
12.5 MIPS at 12.5 MHz
1
1
1987
[ 40]
Texas Instruments TMS320C25
25 MIPS at 50 MHz
0.5
0.5
1987
[ 39]
Intel i486DX
8.7 MIPS at 25 MHz
0.348
0.348
1989
[ 13]
NEC V80
16.5 MIPS at 33 MHz
0.5
0.5
1989
[ 35]
Intel i860
25 MIPS at 25 MHz
1
1
1989
[ 41]
ARM3
12 MIPS at 25 MHz
0.5
0.5
1989
[ 42]
Motorola 68040
44 MIPS at 40 MHz
1.1
1.1
1990
[ 43]
AMD Am386
9 MIPS at 40 MHz
0.225
0.225
1991
[ 44]
Intel i486DX
11.1 MIPS at 33 MHz
0.336
0.336
1991
[ 13]
Intel i860
50 MIPS at 50 MHz
1
1
1991
[ 41]
Intel i486DX2
25.6 MIPS at 66 MHz
0.388
0.388
1992
[ 13]
Alpha 21064 (EV4)
86 MIPS at 150 MHz
0.573
0.573
1992
[ 13]
Alpha 21064 (EV4S/EV45)
135 MIPS at 200 MHz
0.675
0.675
1993
[ 13] [ 45]
MIPS R4400
85 MIPS at 150 MHz
0.567
0.567
1993
[ 46]
Gmicro/500
132 MIPS at 66 MHz
2
2
1993
[ 47]
IBM-Motorola PowerPC 601
157.7 MIPS at 80 MHz
1.971
1.971
1993
[ 48]
ARM7
40 MIPS at 45 MHz
0.889
0.889
1994
[ 49]
Intel DX4
70 MIPS at 100 MHz
0.7
0.7
1994
[ 14]
Motorola 68060
110 MIPS at 75 MHz
1.33
1.33
1994
Intel Pentium
188 MIPS at 100 MHz
1.88
1.88
1994
[ 50]
Microchip PIC16F
5 MIPS at 20 MHz
0.25
0.25
1995
[ 51]
IBM-Motorola PowerPC 603e
188 MIPS at 133 MHz
1.414
1.414
1995
[ 52]
ARM 7500FE
35.9 MIPS at 40 MHz
0.9
0.9
1996
IBM-Motorola PowerPC 603ev
423 MIPS at 300 MHz
1.41
1.41
1996
[ 52]
Intel Pentium Pro
541 MIPS at 200 MHz
2.7
2.7
1996
[ 53]
Hitachi SH-4
360 MIPS at 200 MHz
1.8
1.8
1997
[ 54] [ 55]
IBM-Motorola PowerPC 750
525 MIPS at 233 MHz
2.3
2.3
1997
Zilog eZ80
80 MIPS at 50 MHz
1.6
1.6
1999
[ 56]
Intel Pentium III
2,054 MIPS at 600 MHz
3.4
3.4
1999
[ 50]
Freescale MPC8272
760 MIPS at 400 MHz
1.9
1.9
2000
[ 57]
AMD Athlon
3,561 MIPS at 1.2 GHz
3.0
3.0
2000
Silicon Recognition ZISC 78
8,600 MIPS at 33 MHz
260.6
260.6
2000
[ 58]
ARM11
515 MIPS at 412 MHz
1.25
1.25
2002
[ 59]
AMD Athlon XP 2500+
7,527 MIPS at 1.83 GHz
4.1
4.1
2003
[ 50]
Pentium 4 Extreme Edition
9,726 MIPS at 3.2 GHz
3.0
3.0
2003
Microchip PIC10F
1 MIPS at 4 MHz
0.25
0.25
2004
[ 60] [ 61]
ARM Cortex-M3
125 MIPS at 100 MHz
1.25
1.25
2004
[ 62]
Nios II
190 MIPS at 165 MHz
1.13
1.13
2004
[ 63]
MIPS32 4KEc
356 MIPS at 233 MHz
1.5
1.5
2004
[ 64]
VIA C7
1,799 MIPS at 1.3 GHz
1.4
1.4
2005
[ 65]
ARM Cortex-A8
2,000 MIPS at 1.0 GHz
2.0
2.0
2005
[ 66]
AMD Athlon FX-57
12,000 MIPS at 2.8 GHz
4.3
4.3
2005
AMD Athlon 64 3800+ X2 (2-core)
14,564 MIPS at 2.0 GHz
7.3
3.6
2005
[ 67]
PowerPC G4 MPC7448
3,910 MIPS at 1.7 GHz
2.3
2.3
2005
[ 68]
ARM Cortex-R4
450 MIPS at 270 MHz
1.66
1.66
2006
[ 69]
MIPS32 24K
604 MIPS at 400 MHz
1.51
1.51
2006
[ 70]
PS3 Cell BE (PPE only)
10,240 MIPS at 3.2 GHz
3.2
3.2
2006
IBM Xenon CPU (3-core)
19,200 MIPS at 3.2 GHz
6.0
2.0
2005
AMD Athlon FX-60 (2-core)
18,938 MIPS at 2.6 GHz
7.3
3.6
2006
[ 67]
Intel Core 2 Extreme X6800 (2-core)
27,079 MIPS at 2.93 GHz
9.2
4.6
2006
[ 67]
Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6700 (4-core)
49,161 MIPS at 2.66 GHz
18.4
4.6
2006
[ 71]
MIPS64 20Kc
1,370 MIPS at 600 MHz
2.3
2.3
2007
[ 72]
P.A. Semi PA6T-1682M
8,800 MIPS at 1.8 GHz
4.4
4.4
2007
[ 73]
Qualcomm Scorpion (Cortex A8-like)
2,100 MIPS at 1 GHz
2.1
2.1
2008
[ 59]
Intel Atom N270
3,846 MIPS at 1.6 GHz
2.4
2.4
2008
[ 74]
Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9770 (4-core)
59,455 MIPS at 3.2 GHz
18.6
4.6
2008
[ 71]
Intel Core i7 920 (4-core)
82,300 MIPS at 2.93 GHz
28.089
7.022
2008
[ 75]
ARM Cortex-M0
45 MIPS at 50 MHz
0.9
0.9
2009
[ 76]
ARM Cortex-A9 (2-core)
7,500 MIPS at 1.5 GHz
5.0
2.5
2009
[ 77]
AMD Phenom II X4 940 Black Edition
42,820 MIPS at 3.0 GHz
14.3
3.5
2009
[ 78]
AMD Phenom II X6 1100T
78,440 MIPS at 3.3 GHz
23.7
3.9
2010
[ 75]
Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition 980X (6-core)
147,600 MIPS at 3.33 GHz
44.7
7.46
2010
[ 79]
ARM Cortex A5
1,256 MIPS at 800 MHz
1.57
1.57
2011
[ 66]
ARM Cortex A7
2,850 MIPS at 1.5 GHz
1.9
1.9
2011
[ 59]
Qualcomm Krait (Cortex A15-like, 2-core)
9,900 MIPS at 1.5 GHz
6.6
3.3
2011
[ 59]
AMD E-350 (2-core)
10,000 MIPS at 1.6 GHz
6.25
3.125
2011
[ 80]
Nvidia Tegra 3 (Quad core Cortex-A9 )
13,800 MIPS at 1.5 GHz
9.2
2.5
2011
Samsung Exynos 5250 (Cortex-A15-like 2-core)
14,000 MIPS at 2.0 GHz
7.0
3.5
2011
[ 81]
Intel Core i5 -2500K (4-core)
83,000 MIPS at 3.3 GHz
25.152
6.288
2011
[ 82]
Intel Core i7 875K
92,100 MIPS at 2.93 GHz
31.4
7.85
2011
[ 75]
AMD FX-8150 (8-core)
90,749 MIPS at 3.6 GHz
25.2
3.15
2011
[ 83]
Intel Core i7 2600K (4-core)
117,160 MIPS at 3.4 GHz
34.45
8.61
2011
[ 84]
Intel Core i7-3960X (6-core)
176,170 MIPS at 3.3 GHz
53.38
8.89
2011
[ 85]
AMD FX-8350 (8-core)
97,125 MIPS at 4.2 GHz
23.1
2.9
2012
[ 83] [ 86]
AMD FX-9590 (8-core)
115,625 MIPS at 5.0 GHz
23.1
2.9
2012
[ 75]
Intel Core i7 3770K (4-core)
106,924 MIPS at 3.9 GHz
27.4
6.9
2012
[ 83]
Intel Core i7 4770K (4-core)
133,740 MIPS at 3.9 GHz
34.29
8.57
2013
[ 83] [ 86] [ 87]
Intel Core i7 5960X (8-core)
298,190 MIPS at 3.5 GHz
85.2
10.65
2014
[ 88]
Intel Core i7 6950X (10-core)
320,440 MIPS at 3.5 GHz
91.55
9.16
2016
[ 89]
ARM Cortex A73 (4-core)
71,120 MIPS at 2.8 GHz
25.4
6.35
2016
ARM Cortex A75
?
?
8.2-9.5
2017
[ 90]
ARM Cortex A76
?
?
10.7-12.4
2018
[ 90]
ARM Cortex A53
2,300 MIPS at 1 GHz
2.3
2.3
2012
[ 91]
ARM Cortex A35
2,100 MIPS at 1 GHz
2.1
2.1
2015
[ 91]
ARM Cortex A72
15,750 to 18,375 at 2.5 GHz
6.3 to 7.35
6.3 to 7.35
2015
[ 91]
ARM Cortex A57
10,250 to 11,750 at 2.5 GHz
4.1 to 4.7
4.1 to 4.7
2012
[ 91]
Sitara AM64x ARM Cortex A53 (2-core)
5,992 MIPS at 1 GHz
6
3
2021
[ 92]
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X (8-core)
304,510 MIPS at 3.7 GHz
82.3
10.29
2017
[ 93]
Intel Core i7-8086K (6-core)
221,720 MIPS at 5.0 GHz
44.34
7.39
2018
[ 94]
Intel Core i9-9900K (8-core)
412,090 MIPS at 4.7 GHz
87.68
10.96
2018
[ 95]
AMD Ryzen 9 3950X (16-core)
749,070 MIPS at 4.6 GHz
162.84
10.18
2019
[ 95]
AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3990X (64 core)
2,356,230 MIPS at 4.35 GHz
541.66
8.46
2020
[ 96]
Intel Core i5-11600K (6-core)
346,350 MIPS at 4.92 GHz
57.72
11.73
2021
[ 97]
Processor / System
Dhrystone MIPS / MIPS
D instructions per clock cycle
D instructions per clock cycle per core
Year
Source
Multi-CPU cluster results
See also
References
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^ LINKS-1 Computer Graphics System: 257× Zilog Z8001 [7] Archived 7 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine at 10 MHz [8] Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine (2.5 MIPS [9] Archived 2015-06-09 at the Wayback Machine ) each
^ Sega System 16: Hitachi-Motorola 68000 @ 10 MHz (1.75 MIPS), NEC-Zilog Z80 @ 4 MHz (0.58 MIPS) [10] Archived 21 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine [11] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine , Intel 8751 @ 8 MHz [12] Archived 21 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine (8 MIPS [13] Archived 26 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine ), Intel 8048 @ 6 MHz "Sega Pre-System 16 hardware notes" . Archived from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016 . (6 MIPS [14] )
^ Namco System 21 hardware: 5× Texas Instruments TMS320C20 @ 25 MHz (62.5 MIPS [15] Archived 1 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine ), 2× Motorola 68000 @ 12.288 MHz [16] Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine (4.301 MIPS [17] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine ), Motorola 68020 [18] Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine @ 12.5 MHz (3.788 MIPS [19] Archived 1 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine ), Hitachi HD63705 @ 2.048 MHz [20] (2.048 MIPS [21] ), Motorola 6809 @ 3.072 MHz [22] (1.29 MIPS [23] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine )
^ Atari Hard Drivin' hardware: [24] Archived 29 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine Motorola 68000 @ 7 MHz (1.225 MIPS [25] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine ), Motorola 68010 @ 7 MHz (1.348 MIPS [26] Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine ), 3× Texas Instruments TMS34010 @ 50 MHz (18 MIPS [27] ), Analog Devices ADSP-2100 @ 8 MHz (8 MIPS [28] ), Texas Instruments TMS32010 @ 20 MHz (5 MIPS "TMS320C1x Digital Signal Processors" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2014 . )
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^ Namco System 21 (Galaxian³) hardware: [29] 80× Texas Instruments TMS320C25 @ 40 MHz (1600 MIPS [30] Archived 1 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine ), 5× Motorola 68020 @ 24.576 MHz (37.236 MIPS [31] Archived 1 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine ) Motorola 68000 @ 12.288 MHz (2.15 MIPS [32] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine ), 10× Motorola 68000 @ 12 MHz (21 MIPS [33] Archived 9 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine )
^ 24× MIPS R4400 (2040 MIPS), [34] Archived 12 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine 12× Intel i860 (600 MIPS) "Intel i860-based Bus Boards" . Archived from the original on 25 June 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2014 .
^ Sega Naomi Multiboard hardware: [35] Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine [36] Archived 2014-10-06 at the Wayback Machine 16× Hitachi SH-4 at 200 MHz (5760 MIPS [37] Archived 2014-12-11 at the Wayback Machine ), 16× ARM7 at 45 MHz (640 MIPS [38] )
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