Unnamed Administration sources reported that Sean Donelan said:
Of course, these numbers are pretty bogus. Most computer manufacture specification sheets are useless for accurately forecasting the power consumption of the equipment. I suspect, after Sun's PR people realize they are getting beat up, they will go back and better calculate the power consumption figures for their servers.
I'm not very interested in who really has the coolest, most efficient computers. I am interested in getting accurate information for planning purposes. If this leads to computer vendors publishing more accurate information, great. I'm afraid instead, the pendulum will swing the other direction and vendors will begin understating their true power requirements.
The best test I can come up with at the drop of a hat: Plug server into std. watt-hour meter. Run benchmark X, Y and/or Z for one hour. Note KWH's consumed. This is so trivial a software house could do it if they had an electrician buy the meter and wire it up with plugs. It will tell you true KWH's, as that's what they measure. The meters are highly tracable back to NIST/etc standards [1] and they are cheap. Radical idea: why not call The Donelan Test, and demand it from your vendors? 1] Want stds that have been beaten on? Use those proven by products with lots of money changing hands. -- A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433