34%
25.02.2013
)
01/31/2013 _i686_ (1 CPU)01/31/2013 09:56:01 AM
avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle
14.78 0.38 3.47 2.16 0.00 79.21
Device: rrqm/s wrqm
34%
25.03.2021
, ioengine=libaio, iodepth=32
fio-3.12
Starting 1 process
Jobs: 1 (f=1)
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=5956: Sat Jan 9 16:38:53 2021
read: IOPS=256k, BW=998MiB/s (1047MB/s)(2045MiB/2049msec
34%
30.11.2025
. You can create memory pressure in the system by launching eight RAM hogs:
stress -m 8 --verbose
These tasks malloc 256MB and touch a byte every 4096 bytes, which dirties each memory page and forces
33%
30.01.2020
tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
148/1 0.001 0.000 156.745 156.745 {built-in method builtins.exec}
1 149.964 149.964 156.745 156.745 md_002.py:3
33%
30.11.2025
creates a 256MB file in the current directory along with process for the job. This process reads complete file content in random order. Fio records the areas that have already been read and reads each area
33%
30.11.2025
53
47
44
439
128KB < < 256KB
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
256KB < < 512KB
2
2
2
3
2
33%
25.03.2020
, according to the README file, requires "half the memory, all in a binary less than 40MB" to run. By design, it is authored with a healthy degree of foresight by the people at Rancher [3]. The GitHub page [4 ... The k3s lightweight and secure Kubernetes distribution can handle both unattended workloads in remote locations with minimal resources and clusters of IoT appliances. ... Kubernetes k3s lightweight distro
33%
18.07.2013
buffered disk reads: 616 MB in
3.00 seconds = 205.03 MB/sec
$ hdparm -T /dev/sda
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 6292 MB in
2.00 seconds = 3153.09 MB/sec
If this were a spinning disk, you would also
32%
26.02.2014
reqs merged: 3.78/s Write reqs completed: 2.10/s
Read BW: 0.00 MB/s Write BW: 0.02 MB/s
Avg sector size issued 23.78 Avg
32%
04.12.2013
,096 and 8,000 bytes of data (16 bytes x 256 elements and 16 bytes x 500 elements), respectively. The extra 4 bytes at the beginning and end of the record make 4,104 bytes for the 256-element example and 8