Originally posted by fxfuji
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A Detailed Guide To Phoronix Test Suite 2.0
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Michael Larabel
https://www.michaellarabel.com/
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Originally posted by Michael View PostIt should ask you regardless of whether you are using GUI or CLI.
However, your tip about the CLI did lead me to the answer. The command line invoked by PTS to iozone showed a record size of 1K.
That value seems rather low to me... do Linux file systems typically transfer files in 1 K chunks? That seems like it would be incredibly inefficient for large files.
I know that Windoze is altogether different, but for it, '64 K is the typical record size that Windows uses when applications try to transfer blocks of data that are bigger than 64 K' according to Don Capps of iozone:
The one other iozone test I remember finding used a record size of 64 K, I believe... I'll try to dig up the link.
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Edit: Found the test I remembered, and another one.
The one I was thinking of was from IBM, and they tested a virtual Linux machine of 192 MB with an ext2 filesystem with an 800 MB test file size. The record size they used for the test was 64 KB:
The other one was a preliminary test of the local disk that was going to be used in a Linux cluster. The computer memory was 1 GB, the test file size was 2 GB, and a variety of filesystems were tested. They swept the record size from 64 KB to 16384 KB, in 2x steps (i.e. they doubled the record size for the subsequent test step):
It seems that the implementation of the iozone test in PTS 2.0 could benefit from being tweaked a little, using a larger record size, or even permitting the user/tester to choose the value. A larger value would probably speed up the test somewhat -- my tests using a 4 KB record size for 4 GB and 8 GB file sizes were unbearably slow, whereas using a 1 MB record size was tolerably slow. :P
Unfortunately, I still don't know.... what is the right record size I should use for my test?Last edited by fxfuji; 15 August 2009, 03:19 PM.
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