What on earth is the problem with the 6450 in all these tests? I don't only mean THIS one but it seems that in all of them, it does horrifically.
Phoronix: Gallium3D LLVMpipe Driver Shows Progress
With talking recently about LLVMpipe driver improvements and having not benchmarked this Gallium3D software driver in a while, here are new benchmarks of this LLVM-based software fallback driver when using Mesa 9.1-devel Git in conjunction with LLVM 3.3 SVN code, for the very latest look at the OpenGL software acceleration possibilities...
http://www.phoronix.com/vr.php?view=MTMxNDI
What on earth is the problem with the 6450 in all these tests? I don't only mean THIS one but it seems that in all of them, it does horrifically.
It's a darn slow part. However, i wonder if it's clocked at full speed. The radeon drivers just use whatever is set as the default in the BIOS, and Michael isn't reclocking it to HIGH mode.
I think some 6450's are passively cooled, so it wouldn't surprise me if that default is the low speed.
Here is the problem with these tests of llvmpipe;
They're testing GAME FRAMERATES. That is NOT where llvmpipe is required for use.
The only important end-user application of llvmpipe is in DESKTOP COMPOSITING, and it isn't a measure of maximum attainable FPS with the CPU pegged, it is a measure of HOW LOW the CPU usage can be when dealing with an underpowered CPU, like a crappy intel-Z with a worthless powervr. Stuff without usable 3D hardware that still needs to do compositing with opengl. Does the llvmpipe driver still cripple an intel-Z processor with gnome3? If the answer to that question is anything besides "yes, and unbearably", then it hasn't improved significantly enough to be worth consideration.