high speed drives
Bill Heiser
bill at unixland.uucp
Sat Feb 23 09:55:05 AEST 1991
In article <797 at tiamat.fsc.com> jim at tiamat.fsc.com ( IT Manager) writes:
>>
>> from "time dd if=/dev/XXXX of=/dev/null bs=100k count=10"
>>
>> for the Miniscribe 3180S
>> 10+0 records in
>> 10+0 records out
>>
>> real 17.7
>> user 0.0
>> sys 0.4
>
>under Unix:
>real 3.0
>user 0.0
>sys 0.2
>
>From the looks of those numbers, it seems that the data you have on the
>drive (or how it is arranged) can have something to do with the performance
>under this type of test.
This is interesting. I tried reading several different partitions
(/dev/dsk/0s0, /dev/dsk/0s1, /dev/dsk/0s3, etc), and all came out about
like this:
Script started on Fri Feb 22 17:49:25 1991
# sh
# time dd if=/dev/dsk/0s3 of=/dev/null bs=100k count=10
10+0 records in
10+0 records out
real 7.6
user 0.0
sys 1.5
# #
script done on Fri Feb 22 17:49:47 1991
This is on a 386/25 running Esix-D. /dev/dsk/0s3 is my /usr partition
(where about 100mb worth of Usenet News is sitting). The disk is
a CDC Wren IV (94171-307).
Your "real time" numbers seemed to vary from 3.0 to 8.0 -- Mine
seemed to stay about the same. Maybe system loading, different buffer
cache size, or some other factor?
Bill
--
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