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⇱ Ubuntu Linux Disk Encryption Benchmarks - Phoronix


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Ubuntu Linux Disk Encryption Benchmarks

Written by Michael Larabel in Operating Systems on 16 March 2008 at 09:20 AM EDT. Page 1 of 3. 11 Comments.

Introduced in Ubuntu 7.10 was install-time encryption support where using the alternate installer one can fully encrypt their disk in an LVM using dm-crypt. Unfortunately, the Ubiquity installer in Ubuntu 8.04 continues to lack LVM and encryption support, but using Ubuntu 8.04 Alpha 6 we have looked at the performance cost of this encrypted configuration on Ubuntu Linux. Rather than looking directly at the disk read/write overhead caused by the encryption process, we have provided some benchmarks to see how the real-world performance is impacted in both gaming and other desktop tasks.

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For looking at the performance cost of Ubuntu Linux disk encryption, we had performed two clean installs of Ubuntu 8.04 Alpha 6 with the Linux 2.6.24 kernel using the alternate installer. In one installation, we had used the "Guided - use entire disk and set up LVM" method and then using "Guided - use entire disk and set up encrypted LVM." All settings in both installations were maintained the same and left at their respective default values.

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Rather than just running Linux disk benchmarks, we had run a variety of our real-world tests. These Linux tests had included Enemy Territory, Doom 3, Enemy Territory: Quake Wars, LAME encoding, Gzip compression, and measuring the time to copy 364 images (amounting to 1.3GB) from a USB flash drive over to the hard drive. The tests we did for this article are as simple as that, we had ran the benchmarks on a standard LVM and encrypted LVM. The test hardware consisted of an AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ AM2 processor, 2GB of A-DATA DDR2-800 memory, 160GB Western Digital SATA hard drive, Abit NF-M2 nView motherboard, and a NVIDIA GeForce 6600GT 128MB graphics card with the 169.12 driver.