Perform bechmarks on the filesystem: Difference between revisions
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*Start the script like this: | *Start the script like this: | ||
./speed_test.sh /mnt/sda1/zerofile /mnt/sdb1/zerofilecopy 3 | ./speed_test.sh /mnt/sda1/zerofile /mnt/sdb1/zerofilecopy 3 | ||
The result will be something like | |||
./speed_test.sh ./zerofile ./2delete 5 | |||
237 MB/s |
Revision as of 19:50, 31 January 2012
- To test the speed of the filesystem (not the physical disk!) you can use the following script:
#!/bin/bash # USAGE: # ./speed_test.sh /path/to/my/file /path/to/destination number_of_tests NUM_TESTs=$3 SUM=0 for i in $( seq 1 $NUM_TESTs ); do REC=`dd if=$1 of=$2 2> some_random_file_ ; cat some_random_file_ | cut -d " " -f8 | tail -1` SUM=`echo $SUM + $REC | bc` done RESULT=`echo $SUM / $NUM_TESTs | bc | awk '{ str1=str1 $0 }END{ print str1 }'` echo $RESULT MB/s #clean up rm some_random_file_ rm $2
- To make a big file, use
cat /dev/zero > zerofile
and abort it with CTRL-C after a few seconds.
Alternatively, you can use something like
dd if=/dev/zero of=file.out bs=1MB count=500
to create a 500MB file.
- Start the script like this:
./speed_test.sh /mnt/sda1/zerofile /mnt/sdb1/zerofilecopy 3
The result will be something like
./speed_test.sh ./zerofile ./2delete 5
237 MB/s