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diskperf(1)							   diskperf(1)

NAME
     diskperf - Disk Performance Testing Utility

SYNOPSIS
     diskperf [-W] [-D] [-R] [-L] [-n<name>] [-t<n>] [-s<f>]
	      [-d<f>] [-c<n>[k|m|g]] [-r<n>[k|m|g]]
	      [-m<n>[k|m|g]] <testpath>

DESCRIPTION
     The purpose of this utility is to measure the performance of a disk
     configuration as either a raw volume or with a filesystem such as XFS. A
     number of different test patterns are run including forward and backward
     sequential as well as random seek read/write patterns. The output is
     tabulated in a form usable for processing by other utilities such as
     gnuplot for further analysis.

OPTIONS
     -W	  By default diskperf only performs read tests. If this switch is
	  supplied, write tests will also be done.

	  Raw write testing will destroy partition contents !!

	  For filesystem tests, any contents of the test file will be
	  destroyed. Note that is the test file exists it may grow if the end
	  of file is reached before the test time expires.  If the test file
	  does not exist it will be created.

     -D	  In the case of a filesystem test, this switch forces diskperf to use
	  direct I/O when accessing the test file.  Direct I/O is only
	  supported on EFS, XFS and NFS ( via BDS ) filesytems.

	  This switch has no effect for raw tests.

     -R	  Forces testing to take place on the real time subvolume of an XLV
	  volume built with xlv_make.

     -L	  In the case of a raw test, forces testing to take place on the log
	  subvolume of an XLV volume built with xlv_make.

	  This switch has no effect for filesystem tests.

     -n name
	  Specifies an arbitrary identifying name for the test which will
	  appear in the test output. This option is useful to uniquely label
	  results when running from shell scripts.

     -t time
	  Specifies the duration in seconds for each test component. This
	  allows limiting of the run time for individual tests. Care should be
	  taken to use a test time long enough to give a representative result
	  from the disk configuration.

									Page 1

diskperf(1)							   diskperf(1)

	  The default is 10 seconds.

     -s factor
	  Specifies a floating point scaling factor for all the results.  This
	  is useful for obtaining per-disk performance characteristics.

	  The default scaling factor is 1.0

     -d seconds
	  Specifies a floating point delay in seconds between each I/O
	  request.  This is useful for multi-thread tests ( ie. multiple
	  diskperfs running on the same volume ) to alleviate the problem of
	  single threads monopolizing access to the disk hardware, which can
	  be related to the fairness policies of both the disk hardware and
	  the scheduler.

	  The default delay is 0.0 ( no delay )

     -c size[k|m|g]
	  In the case of a filesystem test, this switch forces diskperf to
	  create the test file specified in <testpath> to the specified size
	  in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes ( using suffixes ).  By
	  default, diskperf assumes the test file is an existing file. This is
	  useful if tests need to be done on existing representative data
	  files, or particular files which may be causing problems for an
	  application because of disk errors, fragmentation etc.

	  This switch has no effect for raw tests.

     -r size[k|m|g]
	  Specifies the minimum request size in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes or
	  gigabytes ( using suffixes ). Testing will start at this request
	  size and progressively double until the maximum request size is
	  exceeded.

	  For striped subvolumes the default is the stripe size.  Otherwise,
	  the default value is 16k.

     -m size[k|m|g]
	  Specifies the maximum request size in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes or
	  gigabytes ( using suffixes ). This value defaults to the greater of
	  the kernel maximum allowed DMA size ( controlled by the maxdmasz
	  systune parameter ) and the maximum DMA size for the device.

     testpath
	  Specifies the path to the file or raw device to test.

	  For filesystem tests this is simply a pathname for a test file to be
	  created for performance testing. For example :

									Page 2

diskperf(1)							   diskperf(1)

	       diskperf -D -r4k -m1m /d2/testfile
	       diskperf -W -D -R /disk6/problemfile

	  For raw tests, the is the pathname to a character device. For
	  example :

	       diskperf -r512k -m8m /dev/rdsk/dks10d1s7
	       diskperf /dev/rxlv/striped_volume

RAW DEVICE TESTING
     This is the lowest level of disk testing and bypasses the filesystem
     layer and hence eliminates all overhead normally incurred when accessing
     the disk via a filesystem.	 Note that raw tests will require root
     priveleges to access to raw disk character

     The main reason for using a raw test is to obtain measurements close to
     the physical capabilities of the disk hardware. This gives a set of
     performance ceilings to which filesystem or application level
     measurements can be compared.

     Also, because a raw test has the freedom to access the entire addressable
     space of the disk partition, accurate and representative worst case
     random seek read/write measurements can be obtained because the seek
     distance is not bounded by the size of a test file, as is the case with
     filesystem level tests.

EXAMPLE RAW TEST
     # diskperf -W -n "FC Test #1" -t5 -m16m /dev/rdsk/dks15d1s7
     #---------------------------------------------------------
     # Test name     : FC Test #1
     # Test date     : Sun Jul 20 19:05:34 1997
     # Test machine  : IRIX64 blob 6.4 02121744 IP27
     # Test type     : Raw data subvolume
     # Request sizes : min=16384 max=16777216
     # Parameters    : direct=0 time=5
     #		       path=/dev/rdsk/dks15d1s7
     # Device size   : 142258752 blocks
     #---------------------------------------------------------
     # req_size	 fwd_wt	 fwd_rd	 bwd_wt	 bwd_rd	 rnd_wt	 rnd_rd
     #	(bytes)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)
     #---------------------------------------------------------
	  16384	   9.28	  10.71	   1.97	   1.54	   1.01	   0.85
	  32768	  16.53	  19.30	   3.50	   3.07	   1.99	   1.66
	  65536	  27.28	  32.32	   6.57	   5.75	   3.92	   3.22
	 131072	  36.81	  48.97	  11.98	  10.52	   7.46	   6.13
	 262144	  50.53	  65.90	  20.16	  17.93	  13.54	  11.24
	 524288	  61.98	  79.62	  29.37	  26.72	  23.09	  19.61
	1048576	  68.34	  88.94	  38.32	  36.26	  35.52	  31.46
	2097152	  71.65	  88.86	  45.16	  44.73	  47.45	  44.39
	4194304	  72.31	  88.90	  50.05	  49.40	  55.91	  56.37

									Page 3

diskperf(1)							   diskperf(1)

	8388608	  71.93	  88.81	  50.73	  52.16	  60.39	  63.18
       16777216	  73.40	  88.84	  50.41	  53.83	  60.13	  69.33

FILESYSTEM TESTING
     Filesystem tests perform all I/O activity through whatever filesystem is
     layered on the disk device. These tests are more representative of
     expected real world application performance because they address the disk
     through the same mechanisms used by applications working with
     filesystems. Filesystem tests perform all their testing within a supplied
     ( or created ) test file.	Care must be taken as filesystem tests can
     only work within the bounds of the test file so try to work with as big a
     test file as possible to get more representative results.

EXAMPLE FILESYSTEM TEST
     # diskalign -n "video" -r6m '/dev/dsk/dks[15-17]d1s7' | xlv_make
     video
     video.data
     video.data.0
     video.data.0.0
     Object specification completed
     # mkfs /dev/xlv/video
     meta-data=/dev/xlv/video isize=256 agcount=204 agsize=261504
     data     =		    bsize=4096 blocks=53346816 imaxpct=25
     log      =internal log   bsize=4096 blocks=1000
     realtime =none	      extsz=65536 blocks=0, rtextents=0
     # mount /dev/xlv/video /video
     # diskperf -W -D -n "Striped" -c2g /video/testfile
     #---------------------------------------------------------
     # Test name     : Striped
     # Test date     : Sun Jul 20 20:42:57 1997
     # Test machine  : IRIX64 blob 6.4 02121744 IP27
     # Test type     : XFS striped data subvolume
     # Disk striping : group=3	unit=4096
     # Request sizes : min=6291456 max=67125248
     # Parameters    : direct=1 time=10
     #		       path=/video/testfile
     # XFS file size : 2202009600 bytes
     #---------------------------------------------------------
     # req_size	 fwd_wt	 fwd_rd	 bwd_wt	 bwd_rd	 rnd_wt	 rnd_rd
     #	(bytes)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)	 (MB/s)
     #---------------------------------------------------------
	6291456	  63.94	 245.11	  67.69	 180.23	  66.02	 171.52
       12582912	  78.15	 249.03	  80.68	 210.87	  79.22	 204.64
       25165824	  87.72	 251.56	  89.32	 229.63	  88.77	 228.97
       50331648	  91.73	 239.29	  92.22	 228.00	  92.10	 230.26

BUGS
     None known

									Page 4

diskperf(1)							   diskperf(1)

SEE ALSO
     diskprep(1M), diskalign(1M), xlv_make(1M), mkfs(1M)

NOTES
     None

AUTHOR
     Will McGovern ( willmc@sgi.com )
     Advanced Entertainment Systems Division
     Silicon Graphics Inc.

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