Determining recommended system requirements

佐手、 提交于 2019-11-30 21:14:51

Let's try this from another perspective.

First, test your application on a minimum configuration machine. What bottlenecks if any exist?

  • Does it cause a lot of disk swapping? If so, you need more RAM.
  • Is it generally slow when performing regular operations (excluding memory usage) then increase processor requirements.
  • Does it require diskspace beyond the app footprint such as for file handling? List that.
  • Does your app depend on certain instruction sets to be on chip? (SSE, Execute Disable Bit, Intel Virtualization,.. as examples). If so, then you have to list what processors will actually work with the app.

Typically speaking, if the app works fine when using a minimum configuration for the OS; then your "recommended" configuration should be identical to the OS's recommended.

At the end of the day, you probably need to have a couple of machines on hand to profile. Virtual machines are NOT a good option in this case. By definition, the VM and the host OS will have an impact. Further, just because you can throttle a certain processor down doesn't mean that it is running at a similar level to a processor normally built for that level.

For example, a Dual Core 1.8 GHz processor throttled to only use one core is still a very different beast than a P4 1.8 GHz processor. There are architectural differences as well as L2 and L3 cache changes.

By the same token, a machine with a P4 processor uses a different type of RAM than one with a dual core (DDR vs DDR2). RAM speeds do have an impact.

So, try to stick to the OS recommendations as they've already done the hard part for you.

Come up with some concrete non-functional requirements relating to things like latency of response, throughput, and startup time, and then benchmark them on a few varied machines. The attempt to extrapolate to what hardware will allow a typical user to have an experience that matches your requirements.

For determining the CPU and RAM you could try using Microsoft Virtual PC which allows you to set your CPU and RAM settings. You can then test a few different setups to see what would be sufficient for a regular user.

As for the recommended requirements, adding them on top of the basic OS requirements would probably be the safe bet.

Microsoft introduced the Windows Experience Index in Vista to solve this exact problem.

UPDATE FOR MORE INFO

It takes into consideration the entire system. Bear in mind that they may have a minimum level processor, but if they have a crap video card then a lot of processor time is going to be spent just drawing the windows... If you pick a decent experience index number like 3.0 then you can be reasonably assured that they will have a good experience with your application. If you require more horsepower, bump up the requirements to 4.0.

One example is the Dell I'm using to type this on. It's a 2 year old machine but still registers 4.2 on the experience index. Most business class machines should be able to register at least a 3; which should be enough horsepower for the app you described.

Incidentally, my 5 year old laptop registers as a 2.0 and it was mid level at the time I purchased it.

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