EEMBC
Publishes New Certified Scores for Freescale i.MX31 with ARM Compiler
New results show up to 2x
performance increase
EL DORADO HILLS, Calif. —
The 532-MHz Freescale i.MX31 was tested in an out-of-the-box
environment against four EEMBC® benchmark suites - AutoBench 1.1,
ConsumerBench 1.1, OABench 1.1, and TeleBench 1.1 - yielding extensive data on
the processor’s expected performance in automotive/industrial, digital imaging,
office automation, and fixed telecom applications.
Aggregate score results
Benchmark Suite |
Consolidated Score Type |
Original Score |
New Score |
AutoBench 1.1 |
Automark™ |
126.6 |
258.3 |
ConsumerBench 1.1 |
Consumermark™ |
26.6 |
43.2 |
OABench 1.1 |
OAmark™ |
340.5 |
394.3 |
TeleBench 1.1 |
TeleBench™ |
6.1 |
7.3 |
Original scores were
certified running under the Linux OS, the new scores were certified running
without an OS.
“The
Freescale’s i.MX31 processor, with a vector floating point coprocessor
and L2 cache, is designed for wireless devices, such as portable media players
and portable navigation devices, running computationally intensive multimedia
applications. Based on an ARM1136JF-S™ processor, its target devices include
feature rich smartphones, digital video recorders, digital cameras, mobile
gaming consoles, mobile multimedia players and many other mobile wireless
applications.
The
“ARM uses the EEMBC
benchmarks extensively during the development of our industry-leading processors
and compilers, and these industry recognized results show that we continue to
be ahead of the field in delivering maximum real-world performance and power
efficiency for a wide range of mobile and consumer applications,” said Eric Schorn, vice president of marketing, Processors Division,
ARM.
Detailed benchmark score reports for the
Freescale iMX31 with
EEMBC, the
Embedded Microprocessor Benchmark Consortium develops benchmark software that
helps processor architects and embedded system designers better understand the
capabilities of embedded microprocessors and the systems in which they are
used. Currently available benchmark software allows users to predict unicore
and multicore processor performance and its associated energy cost in digital
entertainment, digital imaging, networking, and office automation applications.
Additional suites address automotive, embedded Java, and telecom applications.
The consortium’s operations include an
EEMBC members include
AutoBench, ConsumerBench, OABench,
TeleBench, Automark, Consumermark, OAmark, and Telemark are trademarks and EEMBC
is a registered trademark of the Embedded Microprocessor Benchmark Consortium.
All other trademarks appearing
herein are the property of their respective owners.