17%
25.03.2020
0 1048575 sr0
With the parted utility, you can create a single partition on each entire HDD:
$ for i in sdb sdc sdd sde; do sudo parted --script /dev/$i mklabel gpt mkpart primary 1MB 100
17%
19.11.2019
Jobs: 1 (f=1): [w(1)][100.0%][w=654MiB/s][w=167k IOPS][eta 00m:00s]
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=1225: Sat Oct 12 19:20:18 2019
write: IOPS=168k, BW=655MiB/s (687MB/s)(10.0GiB/15634msec); 0
17%
30.01.2020
locations and, in turn, introducing latency. As great as this sounds, SSDs are still more expensive than HDDs. HDD prices have settled to around $0.03/GB; SSD prices vary but sit at around $0.13-$0.15/GB
17%
11.04.2016
/s wMB/s avgrq-sz ...
sdb 0.00 28.00 1.00 259.00 0.00 119.29 939.69 ...
Parallelism
Multiple computers can access enterprise storage, and multiple threads can access
16%
18.07.2013
: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
6 Firmware Revision: 2CV102HD
7 Transport: Serial, ATA8-AST, SATA 1.0a, SATA II Extensions, SATA Rev 2.5, SATA Rev 2.6
8 Standards:
9 Used: ATA/ATAPI-7 T13 1532
16%
13.12.2022
-export-libs-9.11.36-3.el8_6.1.x86_64.rpm 579 kB/s | 1.1 MB 00:02
(6/6): warewulf-4.3.0-1.git_235c23c.el8.x86_64.rpm 746 kB/s | 8.3 MB 00
16%
21.01.2020
8 2 488383488 sda2
12 8 16 6836191232 sdb
13 8 64 6836191232 sde
14 8 80 39078144 sdf
15 8 48 6836191232 sdd
16 8 32 6836191232 sdc
17 11 0 1048575 sr0
16%
11.04.2016
hiawatha running
www-data 4766 0.1 0.3 118232 4016 ? Ssl 20:13 0:00 /usr/sbin/hiawatha
You can use netstat to check the bindings:
netstat -tulpn
See the output in Listing 2.
Listing 2
16%
07.10.2014
. The second number is percent CPU load from the system (0.3%sy), and the next is percentage of jobs that are "nice" [2] (0.0%ni). After that, Top lists percent overall CPU time idle (86.3%id; four real cores
16%
27.08.2014
was the sequential write test using 1MB record sizes:
./iozone -i 0 -c -e -w -r 1024k -s 32g -t 2 -+n > iozone_write_1.out
To gather the block statistics, I ran ioprof in a different terminal window before I ran