NAME
tiotest - Threaded I/O bench
SYNOPSIS
tiotest [-h] [-W] [-f SizeInMB] [-d TestDir] [-b BlkSizeInBytes] [-r
NumberRandOpsPerThread] [-t NumberOfThreads] [-T] [-c] [-L] [-S] [-R]
[-D DebugLevel] [-k SkipTestNoN]
DESCRIPTION
tiotest is a file system benchmark especially designed to test
I/O performance with multiple running threads.
OPTIONS
-h Display a brief help and exit.
-W Instructs tiotest to wait for previous thread to finish before
starting a new one in the writing phase. This results in the
files to be sequentially allocated and thus prevents them to be
fragmented. Of course the writeside test is not parallel then
but in readside the files are physically more sequentially
placed on the media (well this depends on the filesystem too).
-f SizeInMB
The filesize per threat in MBytes. Defaults to 10 MB.
-d TestDir
The directory in which to test. Defaults to ., the current
directory.
-b BlkSizeInBytes
The blocksize in Bytes to use. Defaults to 4096.
-r NumberRandOpsPerThread
Random I/O operations per thread. Defaults to 1000.
-t NumberOfThreads
The number of concurrent test threads. Defaults to 4.
-T More terse output.
-c Consistency check data. This should be used for stresstesting
the media rather than benchmarking (it will slow io and raise
cpu percentage). It is especially usefull to seek media for
very hard to detect errors.
-L Hide latency output.
-S Do writing synchronously.
-R Use raw drives.
-D DebugLevel
Set the debug level.
-k fISkipTestNoN
Skip test number n. Could be used several times.
Example:
while tiotest -c -f 2000 ; do echo run ok ; done
To get usefull results the used file sizes should be a lot larger than
the physical amount of memory you have. A good idea is to boot with 16
Megs of RAM (Try passing the "mem=16M" option to the kernel to limit
Linux to using a very small amount of memory) and into Single User mode
only.
SEE ALSO
tiobench(1), bonnie(1), hdparm(8)
AUTHOR
tiotest was written by Mika Kuoppala <miku@iki.fi>.
This manual page was written by Peter Palfrader <weasel@debian.org>,
for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).