Download
the test suite here.
2.4MB
The Driver Heaven photoshop bench
V2 is free for everyone to use and that includes online
or printed publications (many already do, such as Hardocp
and Madshrimps). However when using this scripted benchmark
in a hardware review or any published material please
include a link somewhere to this page. This ensures your
readers are able to download the script themselves and
have access to our online database as a means of comparison.
It is also courteous.
We have now released an online database
to allow users to enter and compare their scores, please
head over to our
new section here after following the instructions
on this page to run the script. The new database
system automatically calculates your final time.
Adobe released in April 2005 VCS2
of Photoshop. This version in my testing to this point
has some (noticeable) improvements regarding code and
the use of Hyper Threading on Intel Processors. I have
seen increases of 10%+ on some other systems. A
test comparison is as follows, test system:: P4 Prescott
570, 3.8ghz - 2 gig of DDR2, 100gigx2 HD in raid 0.
PHOTOSHOP CS 2
1: Texturiser Test (1)
3.2 seconds
2: CYMK Colour Conversion
4.1 seconds
3: RGB Colour Conversion
4.7 seconds
4: Dust and Scratches
3.8 seconds
5: Watercolour
26.5 seconds
6: Texturiser Test (2)
6.9 seconds
7: Stained Glass
10.7 seconds
8: Lighting Effects
6.3 seconds
9: Mosiac Tiles
22.2 seconds
10: Extrude
45.0 seconds
11: Smart Blur
40.0 seconds
12. Underpainting
31 seconds
Total time: 204.4 seconds |
PHOTOSHOP CS
1: Texturiser Test (1)
3.7 seconds
2: CYMK Colour Conversion
4.2 seconds
3: RGB Colour Conversion
6.0 seconds
4: Dust and Scratches
6.5 seconds
5: Watercolour
46.4 seconds
6: Texturiser Test (2)
9.8 seconds
7: Stained Glass
10.9 seconds
8: Lighting Effects
6.4 seconds
9: Mosiac Tiles
28.1 seconds
10: Extrude
52.6 seconds
11: Smart Blur
41.3 seconds
12. Underpainting
42.7 seconds
Total time: 258.6 seconds |
Thats a massive 26.5% increase, so if you are attempting
to compare scores between platforms you must be running
the same version of photoshop.
********
Most of the regulars coming
to Driverheaven.net will be aware of the fact we run a
custom Photoshop benchmark in all of our motherboard and
memory hardware reviews. Today we are releasing the new
overhauled V2, which offers full compatibility with V7
and the newest CS version. The V2 benchmark will be now
featuring in our forthcoming reviews and is a fantastic
real world test of cpu power and memory bandwidth. I have
been using Photoshop since 1990 on the Macintosh and have
taught many users how to unleash the versatility of this
incredible application.
In case you missed the link above, you can download the
action benchmark
script and test image here. Before running
the benchmark please read the information on this webpage
to ensure correct benchmarking. The archive is dual encoded,
winrar on the outer shell and a self extracting uharc
archive within. Use winrar
to extract then double click the EXE.
This script is compatible with Apple Macintosh versions
of photoshop and you can download the Macintosh friendly
ZIP version here.
For those reading this who own a website you are allowed
to mirror either version of the file and this page information
as long as the contents including the readme, or benching
actions script are not altered in any way - a link to
this page would also be appreciated.
Most people are tired of running 3dmark and Pcmark and
similar benchmarks, while these are visually attractive
benchmarks they are not in many cases indicative of real
world situations, this is not the case with photoshop.
This is a real world application with a myriad of uses
appealing to all users from digital photographers to budding
graphic designers. It is also a wonderful test of all
round system performance, specifically memory bandwidth
and CPU processing power. Massive files are also a good
test of hard drive access performance as photoshop will
rely heavily for its "paging file".
This version of Driverheaven Photoshop Bench as I mentioned
is compatible with V7 and CS, but I really have to stress,
due to coding alterations between versions of the application,
along with rewritten filters, the test results are not
interchangeable. Photoshop CS has some improvements to
filter coding and performance and many results such as
the stained glass filter give very different timing results.
In forthcoming Driverheaven reviews all results will be
taken from CS but im aware not everyone will have the
newest version so ive ensured the suite will work with
the older V7, the results will just be slower.
Preparations before benchmarking
Firstly, you are going to need 512 meg of ram minimum
in your system and you must ensure before running the
benchmark that all cpu hogging background programs are
closed and any applications such as antivirus which might
corrupt test results are disabled. My rule of thumb is
to restart your system and load photoshop fresh into memory,
you will see some quite large variations if not. Those
of you with 1024 or more of system memory can skip the
next memory optimisation section, but those with 512 should
follow my guidelines.
After loading Photoshop, go to EDIT/Preferences/Memory
and Image Cache.
Once you are into the subpanel, ensure photoshop has
a minimum of 300 meg of ram allocated. 
You will need to reload the application, however to ensure
accurate results, I also advise a restart, this is to
verify no memory fragmentation occurs. Once you restart,
reload Photoshop, and open our test file. The test file
is a JPEG which will decompress to 60 megabytes. For those
interested, its a picture of carrickfergus castle, in
Ireland, taken with my Canon EOS 20D digital camera and
resampled to a larger size.
Open the driverheaven test image "driverheaventest.jpg"
file 
Once you have opened this, open the actions pallette,
making sure first that button mode is OFF. 
Within the same section scroll down the options to LOAD
ACTION.
This will open a window, drive to the place you extracted
the archive and load the DH BENCH.atn file. Once loaded
press button mode again and you should see this 
Benchmarking
If you have opened the test image and loaded the DH bench
action script, now all you have to do is press F4 or click
on the red actions bar and follow the instructions, noting
the times for each section. After a short while you should
have the results of 12 different subbenchmarks which will
give a total figure. These benchmarks are varied and will
stress different facets of your system CPU and memory
bandwidth performance giving an overall time.
To record times, you use the built in photoshop timing
feature which is accessible from here simply move the selection until "TIMING" is
highlighted. you will now see a readout to the left of
this.
if the time does NOT say 0.0 before running the benchmark
then we need to reset the time (opening the test image
will probably have set this counter to around 1 second).
Hold the ALT key and click on the arrow then back
to TIMING again, you should see the figure reset
to 0.0 quickly - this ensures a zero starting point.
The script will explain what you need to do as it is
running with stop points so you can record times for the
final result and to compare processor and system differences
between various sections of the suite.
The suite comprises the following sections:
1: Texturiser Test (1)
A Canvas filter, scaling 106, relief 5, without
inverting texture and light direction from the top.
2: CMYK Colour Conversion
Important for all the professionals as this 4 plate (cyan,
magenta, yellow and black (k-key colour)) colour mode
is used in graphics bureaus and printing presses for colour
reproduction to newsprint or magazine. Digital photographs
will be converted to this mode for final output.
3: RGB Colour Conversion
Important test for web designers as this colour mode is
used for webpages and will be the mode of choice for digital
images raw from the camera.
4: Dust and Scratches
A filter which is used quite widely by professionals scanning
less than perfect original flat copy. Radius is set to
3 and Threshold is set to 36.
5: Watercolour
An effective and intense filter, set to Brush detail 9,
shadow intensity 2, and texture of 2.
6: Texturiser Test (2)
Another run of the texturiser test, this time with different
settings which will be applied on top of the watercolour
filter above, Canvas filter again, scaling of 109, Relief
of 11, invert texture on this time and light direction
again from the top.
7: Stained Glass
A very intensive filter indeed, which ran slower on V7,
with CS this filter runs in a fraction of the time, Cell
size 10, Border Thickness 4, Light Intensity of 3.
8: Lighting Effects
Light source on RGB colour, red 1, green 113, Blue 252,
With light on, Intensity of 85, Light Type, Omni, Position
50,926,50, Vector 0: 35 185 94.907, Vector 1: 27 778 68
056, Radius of 19.444, Current light 1, Gloss 71, Material
35, Exposure 46, Ambience -37, Ambient colour: RGB, Red
255, Green 255, Blue 255, Texture Channel, blue, with
white is high, height 100, Frame width 68.519.
9: Mosiac Tiles
Makes use of memory bandwidth, Tile Size 9, Grout Width
3, Lighten Grout 9.
10: Extrude
Size 12, Depth 16, without solid front faces, without
mask incomplete blocks, type: blocks, and random.
11: Smart Blur
Radius 20.7, Threshold 28.7, Quality High, Mode Normal.
12. Underpainting
Brush size 7, Texture coverage 16, Texture type Canvas,
Scaling 100, Relief 4, Invert texture on, light direction,
top.
Comparison results 1 (High End Overclocked Intel
PC System):
Intel Extreme Edition processor 3.73 ghz @ 4.1ghz (64
bit processor), Asus P5AD2-E Motherboard 1002 bios, 2
gig of OCZ ram running at 800mhz 8-2-3-4. OCZ 520 Powerstream
supply. Maxtor 300gig 16 meg Cache HD, Windows XP 64 bit
Professional. Photoshop CS.Other test results will be added shortly on other systems,
for more results and to compare with our members, please
visit this thread on our forums.
1: Texturiser Test (1)
2.5 seconds
2: CYMK Colour Conversion
3.1 seconds
3: RGB Colour Conversion
5.5 seconds
4: Dust and Scratches
6.1 seconds
5: Watercolour
21.3 seconds
6: Texturiser Test (2)
2.6 seconds
7: Stained Glass
9.5 seconds
8: Lighting Effects
5.2 seconds
9: Mosiac Tiles
12.1 seconds
10: Extrude
38 seconds
11: Smart Blur
22 seconds
12. Underpainting
18 seconds
Total time: 145.9 seconds.
Comparison results 2 (Laptop):
1.6 Dothan, 512MB PC2700 (2x256), XP Home, Pshop 7.0,
60GB 4200rpm HDD
1: Texturiser Test (1)
4.0 seconds
2: CYMK Colour Conversion
11.4 seconds
3: RGB Colour Conversion
13.1 seconds
4: Dust and Scratches
51.3 seconds
5: Watercolour
42.5 seconds
6: Texturiser Test (2)
14.8 seconds
7: Stained Glass
339.6 seconds
8: Lighting Effects
14.0 seconds
9: Mosiac Tiles
24.3 seconds
10: Extrude
81.9 seconds
11: Smart Blur
43.2 seconds
12. Underpainting
38.3 seconds
Total time: 678.4 seconds.
Comparison Results 3 (High End Macintosh System)
http://homepage.mac.com/znowdog/
- thanks : Lars Broberg
PowerMac G5, dual 2.5, 2GB ram, WD Raptor, Photoshop
CS
1: Texturiser Test (1)
10.1 seconds
2: CYMK Colour Conversion
2.2 seconds
3: RGB Colour Conversion
2.4 seconds
4: Dust and Scratches
3.5 seconds
5: Watercolour
29.9 seconds
6: Texturiser Test (2)
8.5 seconds
7: Stained Glass
10.8 seconds
8: Lighting Effects
4.4 seconds
9: Mosiac Tiles
40.4 seconds
10: Extrude
65.8 seconds
11: Smart Blur
60.3 seconds
12. Underpainting
38.4 secondsTotal time: 276.7 seconds.
Special thanks to Craig "5320" Humphreys
and Jon "Tastyweat" McRae for their beta testing
during the development stages.
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