DBENCH(1) | General Commands Manual | DBENCH(1) |
NAME¶
dbench - Measure disk throughput for simulated netbench run
SYNOPSIS¶
dbench [options]numclients
tbench [options]numclientsserver tbench_srv
[options]
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual page documents briefly the dbench and tbench benchmarks. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. However, it has fairly easy to read source code.
Netbench is a terrible benchmark, but it's an "industry
standard" and it's what is used in the press to rate windows
fileservers like Samba and WindowsNT.
Given the requirements of running netbench (60 and 150 Windows PCs all on
switched fast ethernet and a really grunty server, and a to open up netbench
to the masses.
Both dbench and tbench read a load description file called
client.txt that was derived from a capture of a real netbench run.
client.txt is about 25MB and describes the 500 thousand operations that a
netbench client does in a typical netbench run. They parse client.txt and
use it to produce the same load without having to buy a huge lab.
dbench produces only the filesystem load. It does all the same IO calls that
the smbd server in Samba would produce when confronted with a netbench run.
It does no networking calls.
tbench produces only the TCP and process load. It does the same socket calls
that smbd would do under a netbench load. It does no filesystem calls. The
idea behind tbench is to eliminate smbd from the netbench test, as though
the smbd code could be made infinately fast.
OPTIONS¶
The dbench program takes a number, which indicates the number of clients to run simultaneously. It can also take the following options:
- -c client.txt
- Use this as the full path name of the client.txt file (the default is /usr/share/dbench/client.txt).
- -s
- Use synchronous file IO on all file operations.
- -t TIME
- set the runtime of the benchmark in seconds (default 600)
- -D DIR
- set the base directory to run the filesystem operations in
- -x
- enable xattr support, simulating the xattr operations Samba4 would need to perform to run the load
- -S
- Use synchronous IO for all directory operations (unlink, rmdir, mkdir and
rename).
The tbench program takes a number, which indicates the number of clients to run simultaneously, and a server name: tbench_srv should be invoked on that server before invoking tbench. tbench can also take the following options: - -c loadfile
- Use this as the full path name of the client.txt file (the default is /usr/share/dbench/client.txt).
- -T option[,...]
- This sets the socket options for the connection to the server. The options
are a comma-separated list of one or more of the following:
SO_KEEPALIVE, SO_REUSEADDR, SO_BROADCAST,
SO_NODELAY, SO_LOWDELAY, SO_THROUGHPUT,
SO_SNDBUF=number, SO_RCVBUF=number,
SO_SNDLOWAT=number, SO_RCVLOWAT=number,
SO_SNDTIMEO=number,and SO_RCVTIMEO=number. See
socket(7) for details about these options.
The tbench_srv can only take one option: -t option[,...] as documented above.
SEE ALSO¶
/usr/share/doc/dbench/README contains the original README by Andrew Tridgell which accompanies the dbench source.
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by Paul Russell <prussell@alderaan.franken.de>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
October 15, 2001 |