When it comes to general performance, many things have to be tested. To start, we utilize AIDA64 Engineer to check on memory latency, read, write, and copy speeds. CPU Queen is used for comparisons across various processors and acts as a quick test to see if the processor is performing as it should.
Cinebench R20 offers a look into single and multi-core performance. It can be run by anyone and allows for hardware comparisons across several generations.
To further test CPU performance, we also utilize the Blender BMW benchmark render. Three runs are done to verify the results and check on potential performance degradation caused by thermal throttling.
The ever-popular 7-Zip is also a good general-purpose test as it includes a benchmark that measures the integer instruction rate (MIPS) using the ZIP algorithm. It makes good use of multiple threads, so it has been added to further test system performance.
PCMark 10 offers a look into general computing performance, replacing the venerable PCMark 8. Compared to the separately conducted conventional and accelerated tests of the older release, the newer version now leverages the graphics processor by default.
AIDA64 Cache and Memory Benchmarks
AIDA64 CPU Queen
Cinebench R20
Blender
7-ZIP
PCMark 10