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arch/03-May-2024-760568

compiler/03-May-2024-4631

crc/03-May-2024-2,5311,739

engines/03-May-2024-7,3035,576

examples/03-May-2024-745625

lib/03-May-2024-2,8771,955

os/03-May-2024-3,4342,661

profiles/03-May-2024-619508

t/03-May-2024-930758

tools/03-May-2024-1,4831,179

.gitignoreD03-May-202496 109

Android.mkD03-May-20243.8 KiB10473

COPYINGD03-May-202417.6 KiB341281

FIO-VERSION-GEND03-May-2024723 4332

GFIO-TODOD03-May-20241.9 KiB5336

HOWTOD03-May-202476.8 KiB1,8531,480

LICENSED03-May-2024912 1813

MODULE_LICENSE_GPLD03-May-20240

MakefileD03-May-20248.4 KiB302255

NOTICED03-May-202417.6 KiB341281

READMED03-May-202412.6 KiB348250

REPORTING-BUGSD03-May-2024501 1612

SERVER-TODOD03-May-2024130 32

backend.cD03-May-202443.6 KiB2,0701,477

blktrace.cD03-May-202411.5 KiB526384

blktrace_api.hD03-May-20244.3 KiB136100

cairo_text_helpers.cD03-May-20242.1 KiB8672

cairo_text_helpers.hD03-May-2024571 1914

cconv.cD03-May-202419.9 KiB481438

cgroup.cD03-May-20243.8 KiB210163

cgroup.hD03-May-2024552 3021

client.cD03-May-202435.8 KiB1,5401,201

client.hD03-May-20243.4 KiB145118

configureD03-May-202429.8 KiB1,3341,123

debug.cD03-May-2024464 2721

debug.hD03-May-2024868 5645

diskutil.cD03-May-202416.7 KiB713549

diskutil.hD03-May-20243 KiB13997

err.hD03-May-2024860 4528

eta.cD03-May-202413.3 KiB569448

fifo.cD03-May-20242.3 KiB9844

fifo.hD03-May-20241.7 KiB5932

file.hD03-May-20244.8 KiB188126

filehash.cD03-May-20242.2 KiB12594

filehash.hD03-May-2024405 1511

filelock.cD03-May-20242.8 KiB158116

filelock.hD03-May-2024258 128

filesetup.cD03-May-202431.7 KiB1,5561,167

fio.1D03-May-202463.3 KiB1,7881,764

fio.cD03-May-20241.4 KiB5222

fio.hD03-May-202414.1 KiB648453

fio_time.hD03-May-2024725 2017

flist.hD03-May-20244.6 KiB18396

flow.cD03-May-20242.2 KiB131103

flow.hD03-May-2024233 128

gclient.cD03-May-202440.1 KiB1,4021,093

gclient.hD03-May-2024385 1914

gcompat.cD03-May-20241.2 KiB6046

gcompat.hD03-May-20241.4 KiB4738

gerror.cD03-May-20242.1 KiB7761

gerror.hD03-May-2024215 85

gettime-thread.cD03-May-20241.6 KiB8159

gettime.cD03-May-202412.4 KiB639488

gettime.hD03-May-2024420 2416

gfio.cD03-May-202451.3 KiB1,7521,322

gfio.hD03-May-20243.4 KiB180148

ghelpers.cD03-May-20244.8 KiB202161

ghelpers.hD03-May-20241.2 KiB3628

goptions.cD03-May-202437.7 KiB1,6381,292

goptions.hD03-May-2024172 96

graph.cD03-May-202423.2 KiB1,034765

graph.hD03-May-20244.5 KiB10036

hash.hD03-May-20243.6 KiB152103

helpers.cD03-May-2024706 4135

helpers.hD03-May-2024438 1611

idletime.cD03-May-202411.2 KiB495360

idletime.hD03-May-20241.2 KiB5847

init.cD03-May-202446.9 KiB2,1481,705

io_ddir.hD03-May-20241.5 KiB6150

io_u.cD03-May-202440.1 KiB1,8621,364

io_u_queue.cD03-May-2024762 4436

io_u_queue.hD03-May-20241.3 KiB7657

ioengine.hD03-May-20246.7 KiB247175

ioengines.cD03-May-202412.4 KiB613422

iolog.cD03-May-202415 KiB759563

iolog.hD03-May-20243.3 KiB149104

json.cD03-May-20247.9 KiB366312

json.hD03-May-20242.4 KiB8171

libfio.cD03-May-20246 KiB327230

log.cD03-May-20241.8 KiB10281

log.hD03-May-2024577 2619

memalign.cD03-May-2024663 3727

memalign.hD03-May-2024162 85

memory.cD03-May-20246.1 KiB259206

minmax.hD03-May-2024175 129

mutex.cD03-May-20245 KiB248195

mutex.hD03-May-2024994 4233

options.cD03-May-202487 KiB4,0263,609

options.hD03-May-20243.8 KiB140121

parse.cD03-May-202423.3 KiB1,223986

parse.hD03-May-20243.5 KiB12295

printing.cD03-May-20244.2 KiB140109

printing.hD03-May-202494 74

profile.cD03-May-20242.1 KiB12395

profile.hD03-May-20241.1 KiB5530

server.cD03-May-202436.7 KiB1,7371,323

server.hD03-May-20245 KiB214168

smalloc.cD03-May-20249.2 KiB482376

smalloc.hD03-May-2024246 139

stat.cD03-May-202447.4 KiB1,8821,408

stat.hD03-May-20247.8 KiB245120

td_error.cD03-May-2024911 4234

td_error.hD03-May-2024720 2820

thread_options.hD03-May-202411.3 KiB483396

tickmarks.cD03-May-20243.2 KiB148119

tickmarks.hD03-May-2024239 139

time.cD03-May-20241.9 KiB12489

trim.cD03-May-20241.8 KiB9065

trim.hD03-May-2024797 3727

verify.cD03-May-202428.7 KiB1,2901,015

verify.hD03-May-20242.3 KiB9272

README

1fio
2---
3
4fio is a tool that will spawn a number of threads or processes doing a
5particular type of io action as specified by the user. fio takes a
6number of global parameters, each inherited by the thread unless
7otherwise parameters given to them overriding that setting is given.
8The typical use of fio is to write a job file matching the io load
9one wants to simulate.
10
11
12Source
13------
14
15fio resides in a git repo, the canonical place is:
16
17	git://git.kernel.dk/fio.git
18
19When inside a corporate firewall, git:// URL sometimes does not work.
20If git:// does not work, use the http protocol instead:
21
22	http://git.kernel.dk/fio.git
23
24Snapshots are frequently generated and include the git meta data as well.
25Snapshots can download from:
26
27	http://brick.kernel.dk/snaps/
28
29
30Binary packages
31---------------
32
33Debian:
34Starting with Debian "Squeeze", fio packages are part of the official
35Debian repository. http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=fio
36
37Ubuntu:
38Starting with Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (aka "Lucid Lynx"), fio packages are part
39of the Ubuntu "universe" repository.
40http://packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=fio
41
42Red Hat, CentOS & Co:
43Dag Wieërs has RPMs for Red Hat related distros, find them here:
44http://dag.wieers.com/rpm/packages/fio/
45
46Mandriva:
47Mandriva has integrated fio into their package repository, so installing
48on that distro should be as easy as typing 'urpmi fio'.
49
50Solaris:
51Packages for Solaris are available from OpenCSW. Install their pkgutil
52tool (http://www.opencsw.org/get-it/pkgutil/) and then install fio via
53'pkgutil -i fio'.
54
55Windows:
56Bruce Cran <bruce@cran.org.uk> has fio packages for Windows at
57http://www.bluestop.org/fio/ .
58
59
60Mailing list
61------------
62
63The fio project mailing list is meant for anything related to fio including
64general discussion, bug reporting, questions, and development.
65
66An automated mail detailing recent commits is automatically sent to the
67list at most daily. The list address is fio@vger.kernel.org, subscribe
68by sending an email to majordomo@vger.kernel.org with
69
70	subscribe fio
71
72in the body of the email. Archives can be found here:
73
74	http://www.spinics.net/lists/fio/
75
76and archives for the old list can be found here:
77
78	http://maillist.kernel.dk/fio-devel/
79
80
81Building
82--------
83
84Just type 'configure', 'make' and 'make install'.
85
86Note that GNU make is required. On BSD it's available from devel/gmake;
87on Solaris it's in the SUNWgmake package. On platforms where GNU make
88isn't the default, type 'gmake' instead of 'make'.
89
90Configure will print the enabled options. Note that on Linux based
91platforms, the libaio development packages must be installed to use
92the libaio engine. Depending on distro, it is usually called
93libaio-devel or libaio-dev.
94
95For gfio, gtk 2.18 (or newer), associated glib threads, and cairo are required
96to be installed.  gfio isn't built automatically and can be enabled
97with a --enable-gfio option to configure.
98
99To build FIO with a cross-compiler:
100 $ make clean
101 $ make CROSS_COMPILE=/path/to/toolchain/prefix
102Configure will attempt to determine the target platform automatically.
103
104
105Windows
106-------
107
108On Windows, Cygwin (http://www.cygwin.com/) is required in order to
109build fio. To create an MSI installer package install WiX 3.8 from
110http://wixtoolset.org and run dobuild.cmd from the
111os/windows directory.
112
113How to compile fio on 64-bit Windows:
114
115 1. Install Cygwin (http://www.cygwin.com/). Install 'make' and all
116    packages starting with 'mingw64-i686' and 'mingw64-x86_64'.
117 2. Open the Cygwin Terminal.
118 3. Go to the fio directory (source files).
119 4. Run 'make clean && make -j'.
120
121To build fio on 32-bit Windows, run './configure --build-32bit-win' before 'make'.
122
123It's recommended that once built or installed, fio be run in a Command Prompt
124or other 'native' console such as console2, since there are known to be display
125and signal issues when running it under a Cygwin shell
126(see http://code.google.com/p/mintty/issues/detail?id=56 for details).
127
128
129Command line
130------------
131
132$ fio
133	--debug			Enable some debugging options (see below)
134	--parse-only		Parse options only, don't start any IO
135	--output		Write output to file
136	--runtime		Runtime in seconds
137	--latency-log		Generate per-job latency logs
138	--bandwidth-log		Generate per-job bandwidth logs
139	--minimal		Minimal (terse) output
140	--output-format=type	Output format (terse,json,normal)
141	--terse-version=type	Terse version output format (default 3, or 2 or 4).
142	--version		Print version info and exit
143	--help			Print this page
144	--cpuclock-test		Perform test/validation of CPU clock
145	--crctest[=test]	Test speed of checksum functions
146	--cmdhelp=cmd		Print command help, "all" for all of them
147	--enghelp=engine	Print ioengine help, or list available ioengines
148	--enghelp=engine,cmd	Print help for an ioengine cmd
149	--showcmd		Turn a job file into command line options
150	--readonly		Turn on safety read-only checks, preventing
151				writes
152	--eta=when		When ETA estimate should be printed
153				May be "always", "never" or "auto"
154	--eta-newline=time	Force a new line for every 'time' period passed
155	--status-interval=t	Force full status dump every 't' period passed
156	--section=name		Only run specified section in job file.
157				Multiple sections can be specified.
158	--alloc-size=kb		Set smalloc pool to this size in kb (def 1024)
159	--warnings-fatal	Fio parser warnings are fatal
160	--max-jobs		Maximum number of threads/processes to support
161	--server=args		Start backend server. See Client/Server section.
162	--client=host		Connect to specified backend.
163	--idle-prof=option	Report cpu idleness on a system or percpu basis
164				(option=system,percpu) or run unit work
165				calibration only (option=calibrate).
166
167
168Any parameters following the options will be assumed to be job files,
169unless they match a job file parameter. Multiple job files can be listed
170and each job file will be regarded as a separate group. fio will stonewall
171execution between each group.
172
173The --readonly option is an extra safety guard to prevent users from
174accidentally starting a write workload when that is not desired.  Fio
175will only write if rw=write/randwrite/rw/randrw is given.  This extra
176safety net can be used as an extra precaution as --readonly will also
177enable a write check in the io engine core to prevent writes due to
178unknown user space bug(s).
179
180The --debug option triggers additional logging by fio.
181Currently, additional logging is available for:
182
183	process		Dump info related to processes
184	file		Dump info related to file actions
185	io		Dump info related to IO queuing
186	mem		Dump info related to memory allocations
187	blktrace	Dump info related to blktrace setup
188	verify		Dump info related to IO verification
189	all		Enable all debug options
190	random		Dump info related to random offset generation
191	parse		Dump info related to option matching and parsing
192	diskutil	Dump info related to disk utilization updates
193	job:x		Dump info only related to job number x
194	mutex		Dump info only related to mutex up/down ops
195	profile		Dump info related to profile extensions
196	time		Dump info related to internal time keeping
197	net		Dump info related to networking connections
198	rate		Dump info related to IO rate switching
199	? or help	Show available debug options.
200
201One can specify multiple debug options: e.g. --debug=file,mem will enable
202file and memory debugging.
203
204The --section option allows one to combine related jobs into one file.
205E.g. one job file could define light, moderate, and heavy sections. Tell fio to
206run only the "heavy" section by giving --section=heavy command line option.
207One can also specify the "write" operations in one section and "verify"
208operation in another section.  The --section option only applies to job
209sections.  The reserved 'global' section is always parsed and used.
210
211The --alloc-size switch allows one to use a larger pool size for smalloc.
212If running large jobs with randommap enabled, fio can run out of memory.
213Smalloc is an internal allocator for shared structures from a fixed size
214memory pool. The pool size defaults to 1024k and can grow to 128 pools.
215
216NOTE: While running .fio_smalloc.* backing store files are visible in /tmp.
217
218
219Job file
220--------
221
222See the HOWTO file for a complete description of job file syntax and
223parameters.  The --cmdhelp option also lists all options. If used with
224an option argument, --cmdhelp will detail the given option.  The job file
225format is in the ini style format, as that is easy for the user to review
226and modify.
227
228This README contains the terse version. Job files can describe big and
229complex setups that are not possible with the command line.  Job files
230are a good practice even for simple jobs since the file provides an
231easily accessed record of the workload and can include comments.
232
233See the examples/ directory for inspiration on how to write job files.  Note
234the copyright and license requirements currently apply to examples/ files.
235
236
237Client/server
238------------
239
240Normally fio is invoked as a stand-alone application on the machine
241where the IO workload should be generated. However, the frontend and
242backend of fio can be run separately. Ie the fio server can generate
243an IO workload on the "Device Under Test" while being controlled from
244another machine.
245
246Start the server on the machine which has access to the storage DUT:
247
248fio --server=args
249
250where args defines what fio listens to. The arguments are of the form
251'type,hostname or IP,port'. 'type' is either 'ip' (or ip4) for TCP/IP v4,
252'ip6' for TCP/IP v6, or 'sock' for a local unix domain socket.
253'hostname' is either a hostname or IP address, and 'port' is the port to
254listen to (only valid for TCP/IP, not a local socket). Some examples:
255
2561) fio --server
257
258   Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on the default port (8765).
259
2602) fio --server=ip:hostname,4444
261
262   Start a fio server, listening on IP belonging to hostname and on port 4444.
263
2643) fio --server=ip6:::1,4444
265
266   Start a fio server, listening on IPv6 localhost ::1 and on port 4444.
267
2684) fio --server=,4444
269
270   Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on port 4444.
271
2725) fio --server=1.2.3.4
273
274   Start a fio server, listening on IP 1.2.3.4 on the default port.
275
2766) fio --server=sock:/tmp/fio.sock
277
278   Start a fio server, listening on the local socket /tmp/fio.sock.
279
280Once a server is running, a "client" can connect to the fio server with:
281
282fio --local-args --client=<server> --remote-args <job file(s)>
283
284where --local-args are arguments for the client where it is
285running, 'server' is the connect string, and --remote-args and <job file(s)>
286are sent to the server. The 'server' string follows the same format as it
287does on the server side, to allow IP/hostname/socket and port strings.
288
289Fio can connect to multiple servers this way:
290
291fio --client=<server1> <job file(s)> --client=<server2> <job file(s)>
292
293
294Platforms
295---------
296
297Fio works on (at least) Linux, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, OSX, NetBSD, OpenBSD,
298Windows and FreeBSD.  Some features and/or options may only be available on
299some of the platforms, typically because those features only apply to that
300platform (like the solarisaio engine, or the splice engine on Linux).
301
302Some features are not available on FreeBSD/Solaris even if they could be
303implemented, I'd be happy to take patches for that. An example of that is
304disk utility statistics and (I think) huge page support, support for that
305does exist in FreeBSD/Solaris.
306
307Fio uses pthread mutexes for signalling and locking and FreeBSD does not
308support process shared pthread mutexes. As a result, only threads are
309supported on FreeBSD. This could be fixed with sysv ipc locking or
310other locking alternatives.
311
312Other *BSD platforms are untested, but fio should work there almost out
313of the box. Since I don't do test runs or even compiles on those platforms,
314your mileage may vary. Sending me patches for other platforms is greatly
315appreciated. There's a lot of value in having the same test/benchmark tool
316available on all platforms.
317
318Note that POSIX aio is not enabled by default on AIX. Messages like these:
319
320    Symbol resolution failed for /usr/lib/libc.a(posix_aio.o) because:
321        Symbol _posix_kaio_rdwr (number 2) is not exported from dependent module /unix.
322
323indicate one needs to enable POSIX aio. Run the following commands as root:
324
325    # lsdev -C -l posix_aio0
326        posix_aio0 Defined  Posix Asynchronous I/O
327    # cfgmgr -l posix_aio0
328    # lsdev -C -l posix_aio0
329        posix_aio0 Available  Posix Asynchronous I/O
330
331POSIX aio should work now. To make the change permanent:
332
333    # chdev -l posix_aio0 -P -a autoconfig='available'
334        posix_aio0 changed
335
336
337Author
338------
339
340Fio was written by Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> to enable flexible testing
341of the Linux IO subsystem and schedulers. He got tired of writing
342specific test applications to simulate a given workload, and found that
343the existing io benchmark/test tools out there weren't flexible enough
344to do what he wanted.
345
346Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> 20060905
347
348