![]() MBP i7-3615QM, MacOS Catalina (2.3 quad mid 2012)Īn ancient 2012 MacBook Pro with WSL2 boots Discourse almost as fast as the state of the art MacBook Pro!ĩ880HK CPU boots about 80% faster on Linux than it does in macOS Lenovo P1 - Gen 2 - 9850H - WSL1 - Ubuntu Lenovo P1 - Gen 2 - 9850H - WSL2 - Ubuntuĭesktop: AMD Ryzen 3950X, Arch, NVMe, ruby 2.6.5 (rvm) In this benchmark we simply run rails r Post.first.ĭesktop - 9900KF - Asus Prime Z370 - nvme - Archĭesktop - 9900KF - Asus Prime Z370 - nvme - WSL2 Here are some examples of the benchmarks we got (abbreviated, cause we have many benches): Booting Rails The same CPU tends to perform a lot better (especially boot) on either Linux native or WSL2 (virtualized Linux on Windows) than it does on MacOSĪdditionally, I took the time to run the same benchmark on a dual booting Mac that I have. We have run the benchmark on many of our development machines and noticed a trend. The benchmark lives here, anyone can run it. ![]() It also contains some micro benches to help isolate culprits including: Converting text to HTML via our markdown library.It is a simple benchmark that measures performance of various tasks you are likely to run into in development: Since then I crafted a version of Discourse Bench (used at: ) that is there to profile “performance” of local development machines. ![]() Noah Gibbs started some basic investigation but did not come up with anything definitive. About a year ago I noticed various benchmarks such as running specs were running abnormally slow on macOS. ![]()
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