| .TH fio 1 "March 2017" "User Manual" |
| .SH NAME |
| fio \- flexible I/O tester |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B fio |
| [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIjobfile\fR]... |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .B fio |
| is a tool that will spawn a number of threads or processes doing a |
| particular type of I/O action as specified by the user. |
| The typical use of fio is to write a job file matching the I/O load |
| one wants to simulate. |
| .SH OPTIONS |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-debug \fR=\fPtype |
| Enable verbose tracing of various fio actions. May be `all' for all types |
| or individual types separated by a comma (eg \-\-debug=io,file). `help' will |
| list all available tracing options. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-output \fR=\fPfilename |
| Write output to \fIfilename\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-output-format \fR=\fPformat |
| Set the reporting format to \fInormal\fR, \fIterse\fR, \fIjson\fR, or |
| \fIjson+\fR. Multiple formats can be selected, separate by a comma. \fIterse\fR |
| is a CSV based format. \fIjson+\fR is like \fIjson\fR, except it adds a full |
| dump of the latency buckets. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-runtime \fR=\fPruntime |
| Limit run time to \fIruntime\fR seconds. |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-bandwidth\-log |
| Generate aggregate bandwidth logs. |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-minimal |
| Print statistics in a terse, semicolon-delimited format. |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-append-terse |
| Print statistics in selected mode AND terse, semicolon-delimited format. |
| Deprecated, use \-\-output-format instead to select multiple formats. |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-version |
| Display version information and exit. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-terse\-version \fR=\fPversion |
| Set terse version output format (default 3, or 2 or 4) |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-help |
| Display usage information and exit. |
| .TP |
| .B \-\-cpuclock-test |
| Perform test and validation of internal CPU clock |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-crctest[\fR=\fPtest] |
| Test the speed of the builtin checksumming functions. If no argument is given, |
| all of them are tested. Or a comma separated list can be passed, in which |
| case the given ones are tested. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-cmdhelp \fR=\fPcommand |
| Print help information for \fIcommand\fR. May be `all' for all commands. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-enghelp \fR=\fPioengine[,command] |
| List all commands defined by \fIioengine\fR, or print help for \fIcommand\fR defined by \fIioengine\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-showcmd \fR=\fPjobfile |
| Convert \fIjobfile\fR to a set of command-line options. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-eta \fR=\fPwhen |
| Specifies when real-time ETA estimate should be printed. \fIwhen\fR may |
| be one of `always', `never' or `auto'. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-eta\-newline \fR=\fPtime |
| Force an ETA newline for every `time` period passed. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-status\-interval \fR=\fPtime |
| Report full output status every `time` period passed. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-readonly |
| Turn on safety read-only checks, preventing any attempted write. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-section \fR=\fPsec |
| Only run section \fIsec\fR from job file. This option can be used multiple times to add more sections to run. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-alloc\-size \fR=\fPkb |
| Set the internal smalloc pool size to \fIkb\fP kilobytes. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-warnings\-fatal |
| All fio parser warnings are fatal, causing fio to exit with an error. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-max\-jobs \fR=\fPnr |
| Set the maximum allowed number of jobs (threads/processes) to support. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-server \fR=\fPargs |
| Start a backend server, with \fIargs\fP specifying what to listen to. See client/server section. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-daemonize \fR=\fPpidfile |
| Background a fio server, writing the pid to the given pid file. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-client \fR=\fPhost |
| Instead of running the jobs locally, send and run them on the given host or set of hosts. See client/server section. |
| .TP |
| .BI \-\-idle\-prof \fR=\fPoption |
| Report cpu idleness on a system or percpu basis (\fIoption\fP=system,percpu) or run unit work calibration only (\fIoption\fP=calibrate). |
| .SH "JOB FILE FORMAT" |
| Job files are in `ini' format. They consist of one or more |
| job definitions, which begin with a job name in square brackets and |
| extend to the next job name. The job name can be any ASCII string |
| except `global', which has a special meaning. Following the job name is |
| a sequence of zero or more parameters, one per line, that define the |
| behavior of the job. Any line starting with a `;' or `#' character is |
| considered a comment and ignored. |
| .P |
| If \fIjobfile\fR is specified as `-', the job file will be read from |
| standard input. |
| .SS "Global Section" |
| The global section contains default parameters for jobs specified in the |
| job file. A job is only affected by global sections residing above it, |
| and there may be any number of global sections. Specific job definitions |
| may override any parameter set in global sections. |
| .SH "JOB PARAMETERS" |
| .SS Types |
| Some parameters may take arguments of a specific type. |
| Anywhere a numeric value is required, an arithmetic expression may be used, |
| provided it is surrounded by parentheses. Supported operators are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B addition (+) |
| .TP |
| .B subtraction (-) |
| .TP |
| .B multiplication (*) |
| .TP |
| .B division (/) |
| .TP |
| .B modulus (%) |
| .TP |
| .B exponentiation (^) |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .P |
| For time values in expressions, units are microseconds by default. This is |
| different than for time values not in expressions (not enclosed in |
| parentheses). The types used are: |
| .TP |
| .I str |
| String: a sequence of alphanumeric characters. |
| .TP |
| .I int |
| Integer. A whole number value, which may contain an integer prefix |
| and an integer suffix. |
| |
| [integer prefix]number[integer suffix] |
| |
| The optional integer prefix specifies the number's base. The default |
| is decimal. 0x specifies hexadecimal. |
| |
| The optional integer suffix specifies the number's units, and includes |
| an optional unit prefix and an optional unit. For quantities |
| of data, the default unit is bytes. For quantities of time, |
| the default unit is seconds. |
| |
| With \fBkb_base=1000\fR, fio follows international standards for unit prefixes. |
| To specify power-of-10 decimal values defined in the International |
| System of Units (SI): |
| .nf |
| ki means kilo (K) or 1000 |
| mi means mega (M) or 1000**2 |
| gi means giga (G) or 1000**3 |
| ti means tera (T) or 1000**4 |
| pi means peta (P) or 1000**5 |
| .fi |
| |
| To specify power-of-2 binary values defined in IEC 80000-13: |
| .nf |
| k means kibi (Ki) or 1024 |
| m means mebi (Mi) or 1024**2 |
| g means gibi (Gi) or 1024**3 |
| t means tebi (Ti) or 1024**4 |
| p means pebi (Pi) or 1024**5 |
| .fi |
| |
| With \fBkb_base=1024\fR (the default), the unit prefixes are opposite from |
| those specified in the SI and IEC 80000-13 standards to provide |
| compatibility with old scripts. For example, 4k means 4096. |
| |
| .nf |
| Examples with \fBkb_base=1000\fR: |
| 4 KiB: 4096, 4096b, 4096B, 4k, 4kb, 4kB, 4K, 4KB |
| 1 MiB: 1048576, 1m, 1024k |
| 1 MB: 1000000, 1mi, 1000ki |
| 1 TiB: 1073741824, 1t, 1024m, 1048576k |
| 1 TB: 1000000000, 1ti, 1000mi, 1000000ki |
| .fi |
| |
| .nf |
| Examples with \fBkb_base=1024\fR (default): |
| 4 KiB: 4096, 4096b, 4096B, 4k, 4kb, 4kB, 4K, 4KB |
| 1 MiB: 1048576, 1m, 1024k |
| 1 MB: 1000000, 1mi, 1000ki |
| 1 TiB: 1073741824, 1t, 1024m, 1048576k |
| 1 TB: 1000000000, 1ti, 1000mi, 1000000ki |
| .fi |
| |
| For quantities of data, an optional unit of 'B' may be included |
| (e.g., 'kb' is the same as 'k'). |
| |
| The integer suffix is not case sensitive (e.g., m/mi mean mebi/mega, |
| not milli). 'b' and 'B' both mean byte, not bit. |
| |
| To specify times (units are not case sensitive): |
| .nf |
| D means days |
| H means hours |
| M mean minutes |
| s or sec means seconds (default) |
| ms or msec means milliseconds |
| us or usec means microseconds |
| .fi |
| |
| .TP |
| .I bool |
| Boolean: a true or false value. `0' denotes false, `1' denotes true. |
| .TP |
| .I irange |
| Integer range: a range of integers specified in the format |
| \fIlower\fR:\fIupper\fR or \fIlower\fR\-\fIupper\fR. \fIlower\fR and |
| \fIupper\fR may contain a suffix as described above. If an option allows two |
| sets of ranges, they are separated with a `,' or `/' character. For example: |
| `8\-8k/8M\-4G'. |
| .TP |
| .I float_list |
| List of floating numbers: A list of floating numbers, separated by |
| a ':' character. |
| .SS "Parameter List" |
| .TP |
| .BI name \fR=\fPstr |
| May be used to override the job name. On the command line, this parameter |
| has the special purpose of signalling the start of a new job. |
| .TP |
| .BI wait_for \fR=\fPstr |
| Specifies the name of the already defined job to wait for. Single waitee name |
| only may be specified. If set, the job won't be started until all workers of |
| the waitee job are done. Wait_for operates on the job name basis, so there are |
| a few limitations. First, the waitee must be defined prior to the waiter job |
| (meaning no forward references). Second, if a job is being referenced as a |
| waitee, it must have a unique name (no duplicate waitees). |
| .TP |
| .BI description \fR=\fPstr |
| Human-readable description of the job. It is printed when the job is run, but |
| otherwise has no special purpose. |
| .TP |
| .BI directory \fR=\fPstr |
| Prefix filenames with this directory. Used to place files in a location other |
| than `./'. |
| You can specify a number of directories by separating the names with a ':' |
| character. These directories will be assigned equally distributed to job clones |
| creates with \fInumjobs\fR as long as they are using generated filenames. |
| If specific \fIfilename(s)\fR are set fio will use the first listed directory, |
| and thereby matching the \fIfilename\fR semantic which generates a file each |
| clone if not specified, but let all clones use the same if set. See |
| \fIfilename\fR for considerations regarding escaping certain characters on |
| some platforms. |
| .TP |
| .BI filename \fR=\fPstr |
| .B fio |
| normally makes up a file name based on the job name, thread number, and file |
| number. If you want to share files between threads in a job or several jobs, |
| specify a \fIfilename\fR for each of them to override the default. |
| If the I/O engine is file-based, you can specify |
| a number of files by separating the names with a `:' character. `\-' is a |
| reserved name, meaning stdin or stdout, depending on the read/write direction |
| set. On Windows, disk devices are accessed as \\.\PhysicalDrive0 for the first |
| device, \\.\PhysicalDrive1 for the second etc. Note: Windows and FreeBSD |
| prevent write access to areas of the disk containing in-use data |
| (e.g. filesystems). If the wanted filename does need to include a colon, then |
| escape that with a '\\' character. For instance, if the filename is |
| "/dev/dsk/foo@3,0:c", then you would use filename="/dev/dsk/foo@3,0\\:c". |
| .TP |
| .BI filename_format \fR=\fPstr |
| If sharing multiple files between jobs, it is usually necessary to have |
| fio generate the exact names that you want. By default, fio will name a file |
| based on the default file format specification of |
| \fBjobname.jobnumber.filenumber\fP. With this option, that can be |
| customized. Fio will recognize and replace the following keywords in this |
| string: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B $jobname |
| The name of the worker thread or process. |
| .TP |
| .B $jobnum |
| The incremental number of the worker thread or process. |
| .TP |
| .B $filenum |
| The incremental number of the file for that worker thread or process. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| To have dependent jobs share a set of files, this option can be set to |
| have fio generate filenames that are shared between the two. For instance, |
| if \fBtestfiles.$filenum\fR is specified, file number 4 for any job will |
| be named \fBtestfiles.4\fR. The default of \fB$jobname.$jobnum.$filenum\fR |
| will be used if no other format specifier is given. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .TP |
| .BI unique_filename \fR=\fPbool |
| To avoid collisions between networked clients, fio defaults to prefixing |
| any generated filenames (with a directory specified) with the source of |
| the client connecting. To disable this behavior, set this option to 0. |
| .TP |
| .BI lockfile \fR=\fPstr |
| Fio defaults to not locking any files before it does IO to them. If a file or |
| file descriptor is shared, fio can serialize IO to that file to make the end |
| result consistent. This is usual for emulating real workloads that share files. |
| The lock modes are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B none |
| No locking. This is the default. |
| .TP |
| .B exclusive |
| Only one thread or process may do IO at a time, excluding all others. |
| .TP |
| .B readwrite |
| Read-write locking on the file. Many readers may access the file at the same |
| time, but writes get exclusive access. |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .BI opendir \fR=\fPstr |
| Recursively open any files below directory \fIstr\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI readwrite \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP rw" \fR=\fPstr |
| Type of I/O pattern. Accepted values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B read |
| Sequential reads. |
| .TP |
| .B write |
| Sequential writes. |
| .TP |
| .B trim |
| Sequential trims (Linux block devices only). |
| .TP |
| .B randread |
| Random reads. |
| .TP |
| .B randwrite |
| Random writes. |
| .TP |
| .B randtrim |
| Random trims (Linux block devices only). |
| .TP |
| .B rw, readwrite |
| Mixed sequential reads and writes. |
| .TP |
| .B randrw |
| Mixed random reads and writes. |
| .TP |
| .B trimwrite |
| Sequential trim and write mixed workload. Blocks will be trimmed first, then |
| the same blocks will be written to. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| Fio defaults to read if the option is not specified. |
| For mixed I/O, the default split is 50/50. For certain types of io the result |
| may still be skewed a bit, since the speed may be different. It is possible to |
| specify a number of IO's to do before getting a new offset, this is done by |
| appending a `:\fI<nr>\fR to the end of the string given. For a random read, it |
| would look like \fBrw=randread:8\fR for passing in an offset modifier with a |
| value of 8. If the postfix is used with a sequential IO pattern, then the value |
| specified will be added to the generated offset for each IO. For instance, |
| using \fBrw=write:4k\fR will skip 4k for every write. It turns sequential IO |
| into sequential IO with holes. See the \fBrw_sequencer\fR option. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI rw_sequencer \fR=\fPstr |
| If an offset modifier is given by appending a number to the \fBrw=<str>\fR line, |
| then this option controls how that number modifies the IO offset being |
| generated. Accepted values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B sequential |
| Generate sequential offset |
| .TP |
| .B identical |
| Generate the same offset |
| .RE |
| .P |
| \fBsequential\fR is only useful for random IO, where fio would normally |
| generate a new random offset for every IO. If you append eg 8 to randread, you |
| would get a new random offset for every 8 IO's. The result would be a seek for |
| only every 8 IO's, instead of for every IO. Use \fBrw=randread:8\fR to specify |
| that. As sequential IO is already sequential, setting \fBsequential\fR for that |
| would not result in any differences. \fBidentical\fR behaves in a similar |
| fashion, except it sends the same offset 8 number of times before generating a |
| new offset. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .TP |
| .BI kb_base \fR=\fPint |
| The base unit for a kilobyte. The defacto base is 2^10, 1024. Storage |
| manufacturers like to use 10^3 or 1000 as a base ten unit instead, for obvious |
| reasons. Allowed values are 1024 or 1000, with 1024 being the default. |
| .TP |
| .BI unified_rw_reporting \fR=\fPbool |
| Fio normally reports statistics on a per data direction basis, meaning that |
| reads, writes, and trims are accounted and reported separately. If this option is |
| set fio sums the results and reports them as "mixed" instead. |
| .TP |
| .BI randrepeat \fR=\fPbool |
| Seed the random number generator used for random I/O patterns in a predictable |
| way so the pattern is repeatable across runs. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI allrandrepeat \fR=\fPbool |
| Seed all random number generators in a predictable way so results are |
| repeatable across runs. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI randseed \fR=\fPint |
| Seed the random number generators based on this seed value, to be able to |
| control what sequence of output is being generated. If not set, the random |
| sequence depends on the \fBrandrepeat\fR setting. |
| .TP |
| .BI fallocate \fR=\fPstr |
| Whether pre-allocation is performed when laying down files. Accepted values |
| are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B none |
| Do not pre-allocate space. |
| .TP |
| .B posix |
| Pre-allocate via \fBposix_fallocate\fR\|(3). |
| .TP |
| .B keep |
| Pre-allocate via \fBfallocate\fR\|(2) with FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE set. |
| .TP |
| .B 0 |
| Backward-compatible alias for 'none'. |
| .TP |
| .B 1 |
| Backward-compatible alias for 'posix'. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| May not be available on all supported platforms. 'keep' is only |
| available on Linux. If using ZFS on Solaris this must be set to 'none' |
| because ZFS doesn't support it. Default: 'posix'. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI fadvise_hint \fR=\fPstr |
| Use \fBposix_fadvise\fR\|(2) to advise the kernel what I/O patterns |
| are likely to be issued. Accepted values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B 0 |
| Backwards compatible hint for "no hint". |
| .TP |
| .B 1 |
| Backwards compatible hint for "advise with fio workload type". This |
| uses \fBFADV_RANDOM\fR for a random workload, and \fBFADV_SEQUENTIAL\fR |
| for a sequential workload. |
| .TP |
| .B sequential |
| Advise using \fBFADV_SEQUENTIAL\fR |
| .TP |
| .B random |
| Advise using \fBFADV_RANDOM\fR |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI fadvise_stream \fR=\fPint |
| Use \fBposix_fadvise\fR\|(2) to advise the kernel what stream ID the |
| writes issued belong to. Only supported on Linux. Note, this option |
| may change going forward. |
| .TP |
| .BI size \fR=\fPint |
| Total size of I/O for this job. \fBfio\fR will run until this many bytes have |
| been transferred, unless limited by other options (\fBruntime\fR, for instance, |
| or increased/descreased by \fBio_size\fR). Unless \fBnrfiles\fR and |
| \fBfilesize\fR options are given, this amount will be divided between the |
| available files for the job. If not set, fio will use the full size of the |
| given files or devices. If the files do not exist, size must be given. It is |
| also possible to give size as a percentage between 1 and 100. If size=20% is |
| given, fio will use 20% of the full size of the given files or devices. |
| .TP |
| .BI io_size \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fB io_limit \fR=\fPint |
| Normally fio operates within the region set by \fBsize\fR, which means that |
| the \fBsize\fR option sets both the region and size of IO to be performed. |
| Sometimes that is not what you want. With this option, it is possible to |
| define just the amount of IO that fio should do. For instance, if \fBsize\fR |
| is set to 20G and \fBio_limit\fR is set to 5G, fio will perform IO within |
| the first 20G but exit when 5G have been done. The opposite is also |
| possible - if \fBsize\fR is set to 20G, and \fBio_size\fR is set to 40G, then |
| fio will do 40G of IO within the 0..20G region. |
| .TP |
| .BI fill_device \fR=\fPbool "\fR,\fB fill_fs" \fR=\fPbool |
| Sets size to something really large and waits for ENOSPC (no space left on |
| device) as the terminating condition. Only makes sense with sequential write. |
| For a read workload, the mount point will be filled first then IO started on |
| the result. This option doesn't make sense if operating on a raw device node, |
| since the size of that is already known by the file system. Additionally, |
| writing beyond end-of-device will not return ENOSPC there. |
| .TP |
| .BI filesize \fR=\fPirange |
| Individual file sizes. May be a range, in which case \fBfio\fR will select sizes |
| for files at random within the given range, limited to \fBsize\fR in total (if |
| that is given). If \fBfilesize\fR is not specified, each created file is the |
| same size. |
| .TP |
| .BI file_append \fR=\fPbool |
| Perform IO after the end of the file. Normally fio will operate within the |
| size of a file. If this option is set, then fio will append to the file |
| instead. This has identical behavior to setting \fRoffset\fP to the size |
| of a file. This option is ignored on non-regular files. |
| .TP |
| .BI blocksize \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] "\fR,\fB bs" \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| The block size in bytes for I/O units. Default: 4096. |
| A single value applies to reads, writes, and trims. |
| Comma-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and trims. |
| Empty values separated by commas use the default value. A value not |
| terminated in a comma applies to subsequent types. |
| .nf |
| Examples: |
| bs=256k means 256k for reads, writes and trims |
| bs=8k,32k means 8k for reads, 32k for writes and trims |
| bs=8k,32k, means 8k for reads, 32k for writes, and default for trims |
| bs=,8k means default for reads, 8k for writes and trims |
| bs=,8k, means default for reads, 8k for writes, and default for writes |
| .fi |
| .TP |
| .BI blocksize_range \fR=\fPirange[,irange][,irange] "\fR,\fB bsrange" \fR=\fPirange[,irange][,irange] |
| A range of block sizes in bytes for I/O units. |
| The issued I/O unit will always be a multiple of the minimum size, unless |
| \fBblocksize_unaligned\fR is set. |
| Comma-separated ranges may be specified for reads, writes, and trims |
| as described in \fBblocksize\fR. |
| .nf |
| Example: bsrange=1k-4k,2k-8k. |
| .fi |
| .TP |
| .BI bssplit \fR=\fPstr[,str][,str] |
| This option allows even finer grained control of the block sizes issued, |
| not just even splits between them. With this option, you can weight various |
| block sizes for exact control of the issued IO for a job that has mixed |
| block sizes. The format of the option is bssplit=blocksize/percentage, |
| optionally adding as many definitions as needed separated by a colon. |
| Example: bssplit=4k/10:64k/50:32k/40 would issue 50% 64k blocks, 10% 4k |
| blocks and 40% 32k blocks. \fBbssplit\fR also supports giving separate |
| splits to reads, writes, and trims. |
| Comma-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and trims |
| as described in \fBblocksize\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B blocksize_unaligned\fR,\fB bs_unaligned |
| If set, fio will issue I/O units with any size within \fBblocksize_range\fR, |
| not just multiples of the minimum size. This typically won't |
| work with direct I/O, as that normally requires sector alignment. |
| .TP |
| .BI bs_is_seq_rand \fR=\fPbool |
| If this option is set, fio will use the normal read,write blocksize settings as |
| sequential,random blocksize settings instead. Any random read or write will |
| use the WRITE blocksize settings, and any sequential read or write will use |
| the READ blocksize settings. |
| .TP |
| .BI blockalign \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] "\fR,\fB ba" \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| Boundary to which fio will align random I/O units. Default: \fBblocksize\fR. |
| Minimum alignment is typically 512b for using direct IO, though it usually |
| depends on the hardware block size. This option is mutually exclusive with |
| using a random map for files, so it will turn off that option. |
| Comma-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and trims |
| as described in \fBblocksize\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B zero_buffers |
| Initialize buffers with all zeros. Default: fill buffers with random data. |
| .TP |
| .B refill_buffers |
| If this option is given, fio will refill the IO buffers on every submit. The |
| default is to only fill it at init time and reuse that data. Only makes sense |
| if zero_buffers isn't specified, naturally. If data verification is enabled, |
| refill_buffers is also automatically enabled. |
| .TP |
| .BI scramble_buffers \fR=\fPbool |
| If \fBrefill_buffers\fR is too costly and the target is using data |
| deduplication, then setting this option will slightly modify the IO buffer |
| contents to defeat normal de-dupe attempts. This is not enough to defeat |
| more clever block compression attempts, but it will stop naive dedupe |
| of blocks. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI buffer_compress_percentage \fR=\fPint |
| If this is set, then fio will attempt to provide IO buffer content (on WRITEs) |
| that compress to the specified level. Fio does this by providing a mix of |
| random data and a fixed pattern. The fixed pattern is either zeroes, or the |
| pattern specified by \fBbuffer_pattern\fR. If the pattern option is used, it |
| might skew the compression ratio slightly. Note that this is per block size |
| unit, for file/disk wide compression level that matches this setting. Note |
| that this is per block size unit, for file/disk wide compression level that |
| matches this setting, you'll also want to set refill_buffers. |
| .TP |
| .BI buffer_compress_chunk \fR=\fPint |
| See \fBbuffer_compress_percentage\fR. This setting allows fio to manage how |
| big the ranges of random data and zeroed data is. Without this set, fio will |
| provide \fBbuffer_compress_percentage\fR of blocksize random data, followed by |
| the remaining zeroed. With this set to some chunk size smaller than the block |
| size, fio can alternate random and zeroed data throughout the IO buffer. |
| .TP |
| .BI buffer_pattern \fR=\fPstr |
| If set, fio will fill the IO buffers with this pattern. If not set, the contents |
| of IO buffers is defined by the other options related to buffer contents. The |
| setting can be any pattern of bytes, and can be prefixed with 0x for hex |
| values. It may also be a string, where the string must then be wrapped with |
| "", e.g.: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| \fBbuffer_pattern\fR="abcd" |
| .RS |
| or |
| .RE |
| \fBbuffer_pattern\fR=-12 |
| .RS |
| or |
| .RE |
| \fBbuffer_pattern\fR=0xdeadface |
| .RE |
| .LP |
| Also you can combine everything together in any order: |
| .LP |
| .RS |
| \fBbuffer_pattern\fR=0xdeadface"abcd"-12 |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI dedupe_percentage \fR=\fPint |
| If set, fio will generate this percentage of identical buffers when writing. |
| These buffers will be naturally dedupable. The contents of the buffers depend |
| on what other buffer compression settings have been set. It's possible to have |
| the individual buffers either fully compressible, or not at all. This option |
| only controls the distribution of unique buffers. |
| .TP |
| .BI nrfiles \fR=\fPint |
| Number of files to use for this job. Default: 1. |
| .TP |
| .BI openfiles \fR=\fPint |
| Number of files to keep open at the same time. Default: \fBnrfiles\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI file_service_type \fR=\fPstr |
| Defines how files to service are selected. The following types are defined: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B random |
| Choose a file at random. |
| .TP |
| .B roundrobin |
| Round robin over opened files (default). |
| .TP |
| .B sequential |
| Do each file in the set sequentially. |
| .TP |
| .B zipf |
| Use a zipfian distribution to decide what file to access. |
| .TP |
| .B pareto |
| Use a pareto distribution to decide what file to access. |
| .TP |
| .B gauss |
| Use a gaussian (normal) distribution to decide what file to access. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| For \fBrandom\fR, \fBroundrobin\fR, and \fBsequential\fR, a postfix can be |
| appended to tell fio how many I/Os to issue before switching to a new file. |
| For example, specifying \fBfile_service_type=random:8\fR would cause fio to |
| issue \fI8\fR I/Os before selecting a new file at random. For the non-uniform |
| distributions, a floating point postfix can be given to influence how the |
| distribution is skewed. See \fBrandom_distribution\fR for a description of how |
| that would work. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI ioengine \fR=\fPstr |
| Defines how the job issues I/O. The following types are defined: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B sync |
| Basic \fBread\fR\|(2) or \fBwrite\fR\|(2) I/O. \fBfseek\fR\|(2) is used to |
| position the I/O location. |
| .TP |
| .B psync |
| Basic \fBpread\fR\|(2) or \fBpwrite\fR\|(2) I/O. |
| Default on all supported operating systems except for Windows. |
| .TP |
| .B vsync |
| Basic \fBreadv\fR\|(2) or \fBwritev\fR\|(2) I/O. Will emulate queuing by |
| coalescing adjacent IOs into a single submission. |
| .TP |
| .B pvsync |
| Basic \fBpreadv\fR\|(2) or \fBpwritev\fR\|(2) I/O. |
| .TP |
| .B pvsync2 |
| Basic \fBpreadv2\fR\|(2) or \fBpwritev2\fR\|(2) I/O. |
| .TP |
| .B libaio |
| Linux native asynchronous I/O. This ioengine defines engine specific options. |
| .TP |
| .B posixaio |
| POSIX asynchronous I/O using \fBaio_read\fR\|(3) and \fBaio_write\fR\|(3). |
| .TP |
| .B solarisaio |
| Solaris native asynchronous I/O. |
| .TP |
| .B windowsaio |
| Windows native asynchronous I/O. Default on Windows. |
| .TP |
| .B mmap |
| File is memory mapped with \fBmmap\fR\|(2) and data copied using |
| \fBmemcpy\fR\|(3). |
| .TP |
| .B splice |
| \fBsplice\fR\|(2) is used to transfer the data and \fBvmsplice\fR\|(2) to |
| transfer data from user-space to the kernel. |
| .TP |
| .B sg |
| SCSI generic sg v3 I/O. May be either synchronous using the SG_IO ioctl, or if |
| the target is an sg character device, we use \fBread\fR\|(2) and |
| \fBwrite\fR\|(2) for asynchronous I/O. |
| .TP |
| .B null |
| Doesn't transfer any data, just pretends to. Mainly used to exercise \fBfio\fR |
| itself and for debugging and testing purposes. |
| .TP |
| .B net |
| Transfer over the network. The protocol to be used can be defined with the |
| \fBprotocol\fR parameter. Depending on the protocol, \fBfilename\fR, |
| \fBhostname\fR, \fBport\fR, or \fBlisten\fR must be specified. |
| This ioengine defines engine specific options. |
| .TP |
| .B netsplice |
| Like \fBnet\fR, but uses \fBsplice\fR\|(2) and \fBvmsplice\fR\|(2) to map data |
| and send/receive. This ioengine defines engine specific options. |
| .TP |
| .B cpuio |
| Doesn't transfer any data, but burns CPU cycles according to \fBcpuload\fR and |
| \fBcpuchunks\fR parameters. A job never finishes unless there is at least one |
| non-cpuio job. |
| .TP |
| .B guasi |
| The GUASI I/O engine is the Generic Userspace Asynchronous Syscall Interface |
| approach to asynchronous I/O. |
| .br |
| See <http://www.xmailserver.org/guasi\-lib.html>. |
| .TP |
| .B rdma |
| The RDMA I/O engine supports both RDMA memory semantics (RDMA_WRITE/RDMA_READ) |
| and channel semantics (Send/Recv) for the InfiniBand, RoCE and iWARP protocols. |
| .TP |
| .B external |
| Loads an external I/O engine object file. Append the engine filename as |
| `:\fIenginepath\fR'. |
| .TP |
| .B falloc |
| IO engine that does regular linux native fallocate call to simulate data |
| transfer as fio ioengine |
| .br |
| DDIR_READ does fallocate(,mode = FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE,) |
| .br |
| DIR_WRITE does fallocate(,mode = 0) |
| .br |
| DDIR_TRIM does fallocate(,mode = FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE|FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE) |
| .TP |
| .B e4defrag |
| IO engine that does regular EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT ioctls to simulate defragment activity |
| request to DDIR_WRITE event |
| .TP |
| .B rbd |
| IO engine supporting direct access to Ceph Rados Block Devices (RBD) via librbd |
| without the need to use the kernel rbd driver. This ioengine defines engine specific |
| options. |
| .TP |
| .B gfapi |
| Using Glusterfs libgfapi sync interface to direct access to Glusterfs volumes without |
| having to go through FUSE. This ioengine defines engine specific |
| options. |
| .TP |
| .B gfapi_async |
| Using Glusterfs libgfapi async interface to direct access to Glusterfs volumes without |
| having to go through FUSE. This ioengine defines engine specific |
| options. |
| .TP |
| .B libhdfs |
| Read and write through Hadoop (HDFS). The \fBfilename\fR option is used to |
| specify host,port of the hdfs name-node to connect. This engine interprets |
| offsets a little differently. In HDFS, files once created cannot be modified. |
| So random writes are not possible. To imitate this, libhdfs engine expects |
| bunch of small files to be created over HDFS, and engine will randomly pick a |
| file out of those files based on the offset generated by fio backend. (see the |
| example job file to create such files, use rw=write option). Please note, you |
| might want to set necessary environment variables to work with hdfs/libhdfs |
| properly. |
| .TP |
| .B mtd |
| Read, write and erase an MTD character device (e.g., /dev/mtd0). Discards are |
| treated as erases. Depending on the underlying device type, the I/O may have |
| to go in a certain pattern, e.g., on NAND, writing sequentially to erase blocks |
| and discarding before overwriting. The trimwrite mode works well for this |
| constraint. |
| .TP |
| .B pmemblk |
| Read and write using filesystem DAX to a file on a filesystem mounted with |
| DAX on a persistent memory device through the NVML libpmemblk library. |
| .TP |
| .B dev-dax |
| Read and write using device DAX to a persistent memory device |
| (e.g., /dev/dax0.0) through the NVML libpmem library. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI iodepth \fR=\fPint |
| Number of I/O units to keep in flight against the file. Note that increasing |
| iodepth beyond 1 will not affect synchronous ioengines (except for small |
| degress when verify_async is in use). Even async engines may impose OS |
| restrictions causing the desired depth not to be achieved. This may happen on |
| Linux when using libaio and not setting \fBdirect\fR=1, since buffered IO is |
| not async on that OS. Keep an eye on the IO depth distribution in the |
| fio output to verify that the achieved depth is as expected. Default: 1. |
| .TP |
| .BI iodepth_batch \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP iodepth_batch_submit" \fR=\fPint |
| This defines how many pieces of IO to submit at once. It defaults to 1 |
| which means that we submit each IO as soon as it is available, but can |
| be raised to submit bigger batches of IO at the time. If it is set to 0 |
| the \fBiodepth\fR value will be used. |
| .TP |
| .BI iodepth_batch_complete_min \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP iodepth_batch_complete" \fR=\fPint |
| This defines how many pieces of IO to retrieve at once. It defaults to 1 which |
| means that we'll ask for a minimum of 1 IO in the retrieval process from the |
| kernel. The IO retrieval will go on until we hit the limit set by |
| \fBiodepth_low\fR. If this variable is set to 0, then fio will always check for |
| completed events before queuing more IO. This helps reduce IO latency, at the |
| cost of more retrieval system calls. |
| .TP |
| .BI iodepth_batch_complete_max \fR=\fPint |
| This defines maximum pieces of IO to |
| retrieve at once. This variable should be used along with |
| \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR=int variable, specifying the range |
| of min and max amount of IO which should be retrieved. By default |
| it is equal to \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR value. |
| |
| Example #1: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR=1 |
| .LP |
| \fBiodepth_batch_complete_max\fR=<iodepth> |
| .RE |
| |
| which means that we will retrieve at least 1 IO and up to the |
| whole submitted queue depth. If none of IO has been completed |
| yet, we will wait. |
| |
| Example #2: |
| .RS |
| \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR=0 |
| .LP |
| \fBiodepth_batch_complete_max\fR=<iodepth> |
| .RE |
| |
| which means that we can retrieve up to the whole submitted |
| queue depth, but if none of IO has been completed yet, we will |
| NOT wait and immediately exit the system call. In this example |
| we simply do polling. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI iodepth_low \fR=\fPint |
| Low watermark indicating when to start filling the queue again. Default: |
| \fBiodepth\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI io_submit_mode \fR=\fPstr |
| This option controls how fio submits the IO to the IO engine. The default is |
| \fBinline\fR, which means that the fio job threads submit and reap IO directly. |
| If set to \fBoffload\fR, the job threads will offload IO submission to a |
| dedicated pool of IO threads. This requires some coordination and thus has a |
| bit of extra overhead, especially for lower queue depth IO where it can |
| increase latencies. The benefit is that fio can manage submission rates |
| independently of the device completion rates. This avoids skewed latency |
| reporting if IO gets back up on the device side (the coordinated omission |
| problem). |
| .TP |
| .BI direct \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, use non-buffered I/O (usually O_DIRECT). Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI atomic \fR=\fPbool |
| If value is true, attempt to use atomic direct IO. Atomic writes are guaranteed |
| to be stable once acknowledged by the operating system. Only Linux supports |
| O_ATOMIC right now. |
| .TP |
| .BI buffered \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, use buffered I/O. This is the opposite of the \fBdirect\fR parameter. |
| Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI offset \fR=\fPint |
| Offset in the file to start I/O. Data before the offset will not be touched. |
| .TP |
| .BI offset_increment \fR=\fPint |
| If this is provided, then the real offset becomes the |
| offset + offset_increment * thread_number, where the thread number is a |
| counter that starts at 0 and is incremented for each sub-job (i.e. when |
| numjobs option is specified). This option is useful if there are several jobs |
| which are intended to operate on a file in parallel disjoint segments, with |
| even spacing between the starting points. |
| .TP |
| .BI number_ios \fR=\fPint |
| Fio will normally perform IOs until it has exhausted the size of the region |
| set by \fBsize\fR, or if it exhaust the allocated time (or hits an error |
| condition). With this setting, the range/size can be set independently of |
| the number of IOs to perform. When fio reaches this number, it will exit |
| normally and report status. Note that this does not extend the amount |
| of IO that will be done, it will only stop fio if this condition is met |
| before other end-of-job criteria. |
| .TP |
| .BI fsync \fR=\fPint |
| How many I/Os to perform before issuing an \fBfsync\fR\|(2) of dirty data. If |
| 0, don't sync. Default: 0. |
| .TP |
| .BI fdatasync \fR=\fPint |
| Like \fBfsync\fR, but uses \fBfdatasync\fR\|(2) instead to only sync the |
| data parts of the file. Default: 0. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_barrier \fR=\fPint |
| Make every Nth write a barrier write. |
| .TP |
| .BI sync_file_range \fR=\fPstr:int |
| Use \fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) for every \fRval\fP number of write operations. Fio will |
| track range of writes that have happened since the last \fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) call. |
| \fRstr\fP can currently be one or more of: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B wait_before |
| SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE |
| .TP |
| .B write |
| SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE |
| .TP |
| .B wait_after |
| SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE |
| .TP |
| .RE |
| .P |
| So if you do sync_file_range=wait_before,write:8, fio would use |
| \fBSYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE | SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE\fP for every 8 writes. |
| Also see the \fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) man page. This option is Linux specific. |
| .TP |
| .BI overwrite \fR=\fPbool |
| If writing, setup the file first and do overwrites. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI end_fsync \fR=\fPbool |
| Sync file contents when a write stage has completed. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI fsync_on_close \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, sync file contents on close. This differs from \fBend_fsync\fR in that |
| it will happen on every close, not just at the end of the job. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI rwmixread \fR=\fPint |
| Percentage of a mixed workload that should be reads. Default: 50. |
| .TP |
| .BI rwmixwrite \fR=\fPint |
| Percentage of a mixed workload that should be writes. If \fBrwmixread\fR and |
| \fBrwmixwrite\fR are given and do not sum to 100%, the latter of the two |
| overrides the first. This may interfere with a given rate setting, if fio is |
| asked to limit reads or writes to a certain rate. If that is the case, then |
| the distribution may be skewed. Default: 50. |
| .TP |
| .BI random_distribution \fR=\fPstr:float |
| By default, fio will use a completely uniform random distribution when asked |
| to perform random IO. Sometimes it is useful to skew the distribution in |
| specific ways, ensuring that some parts of the data is more hot than others. |
| Fio includes the following distribution models: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B random |
| Uniform random distribution |
| .TP |
| .B zipf |
| Zipf distribution |
| .TP |
| .B pareto |
| Pareto distribution |
| .TP |
| .B gauss |
| Normal (gaussian) distribution |
| .TP |
| .B zoned |
| Zoned random distribution |
| .TP |
| .RE |
| When using a \fBzipf\fR or \fBpareto\fR distribution, an input value is also |
| needed to define the access pattern. For \fBzipf\fR, this is the zipf theta. |
| For \fBpareto\fR, it's the pareto power. Fio includes a test program, genzipf, |
| that can be used visualize what the given input values will yield in terms of |
| hit rates. If you wanted to use \fBzipf\fR with a theta of 1.2, you would use |
| random_distribution=zipf:1.2 as the option. If a non-uniform model is used, |
| fio will disable use of the random map. For the \fBgauss\fR distribution, a |
| normal deviation is supplied as a value between 0 and 100. |
| .P |
| .RS |
| For a \fBzoned\fR distribution, fio supports specifying percentages of IO |
| access that should fall within what range of the file or device. For example, |
| given a criteria of: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| 60% of accesses should be to the first 10% |
| .RE |
| .RS |
| 30% of accesses should be to the next 20% |
| .RE |
| .RS |
| 8% of accesses should be to to the next 30% |
| .RE |
| .RS |
| 2% of accesses should be to the next 40% |
| .RE |
| .P |
| we can define that through zoning of the random accesses. For the above |
| example, the user would do: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| .B random_distribution=zoned:60/10:30/20:8/30:2/40 |
| .RE |
| .P |
| similarly to how \fBbssplit\fR works for setting ranges and percentages of block |
| sizes. Like \fBbssplit\fR, it's possible to specify separate zones for reads, |
| writes, and trims. If just one set is given, it'll apply to all of them. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI percentage_random \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| For a random workload, set how big a percentage should be random. This defaults |
| to 100%, in which case the workload is fully random. It can be set from |
| anywhere from 0 to 100. Setting it to 0 would make the workload fully |
| sequential. It is possible to set different values for reads, writes, and |
| trim. To do so, simply use a comma separated list. See \fBblocksize\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B norandommap |
| Normally \fBfio\fR will cover every block of the file when doing random I/O. If |
| this parameter is given, a new offset will be chosen without looking at past |
| I/O history. This parameter is mutually exclusive with \fBverify\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI softrandommap \fR=\fPbool |
| See \fBnorandommap\fR. If fio runs with the random block map enabled and it |
| fails to allocate the map, if this option is set it will continue without a |
| random block map. As coverage will not be as complete as with random maps, this |
| option is disabled by default. |
| .TP |
| .BI random_generator \fR=\fPstr |
| Fio supports the following engines for generating IO offsets for random IO: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B tausworthe |
| Strong 2^88 cycle random number generator |
| .TP |
| .B lfsr |
| Linear feedback shift register generator |
| .TP |
| .B tausworthe64 |
| Strong 64-bit 2^258 cycle random number generator |
| .TP |
| .RE |
| .P |
| Tausworthe is a strong random number generator, but it requires tracking on the |
| side if we want to ensure that blocks are only read or written once. LFSR |
| guarantees that we never generate the same offset twice, and it's also less |
| computationally expensive. It's not a true random generator, however, though |
| for IO purposes it's typically good enough. LFSR only works with single block |
| sizes, not with workloads that use multiple block sizes. If used with such a |
| workload, fio may read or write some blocks multiple times. The default |
| value is tausworthe, unless the required space exceeds 2^32 blocks. If it does, |
| then tausworthe64 is selected automatically. |
| .TP |
| .BI nice \fR=\fPint |
| Run job with given nice value. See \fBnice\fR\|(2). |
| .TP |
| .BI prio \fR=\fPint |
| Set I/O priority value of this job between 0 (highest) and 7 (lowest). See |
| \fBionice\fR\|(1). |
| .TP |
| .BI prioclass \fR=\fPint |
| Set I/O priority class. See \fBionice\fR\|(1). |
| .TP |
| .BI thinktime \fR=\fPint |
| Stall job for given number of microseconds between issuing I/Os. |
| .TP |
| .BI thinktime_spin \fR=\fPint |
| Pretend to spend CPU time for given number of microseconds, sleeping the rest |
| of the time specified by \fBthinktime\fR. Only valid if \fBthinktime\fR is set. |
| .TP |
| .BI thinktime_blocks \fR=\fPint |
| Only valid if thinktime is set - control how many blocks to issue, before |
| waiting \fBthinktime\fR microseconds. If not set, defaults to 1 which will |
| make fio wait \fBthinktime\fR microseconds after every block. This |
| effectively makes any queue depth setting redundant, since no more than 1 IO |
| will be queued before we have to complete it and do our thinktime. In other |
| words, this setting effectively caps the queue depth if the latter is larger. |
| Default: 1. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| Cap bandwidth used by this job. The number is in bytes/sec, the normal postfix |
| rules apply. You can use \fBrate\fR=500k to limit reads and writes to 500k each, |
| or you can specify reads, write, and trim limits separately. |
| Using \fBrate\fR=1m,500k would |
| limit reads to 1MiB/sec and writes to 500KiB/sec. Capping only reads or writes |
| can be done with \fBrate\fR=,500k or \fBrate\fR=500k,. The former will only |
| limit writes (to 500KiB/sec), the latter will only limit reads. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate_min \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| Tell \fBfio\fR to do whatever it can to maintain at least the given bandwidth. |
| Failing to meet this requirement will cause the job to exit. The same format |
| as \fBrate\fR is used for read vs write vs trim separation. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate_iops \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| Cap the bandwidth to this number of IOPS. Basically the same as rate, just |
| specified independently of bandwidth. The same format as \fBrate\fR is used for |
| read vs write vs trim separation. If \fBblocksize\fR is a range, the smallest block |
| size is used as the metric. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate_iops_min \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] |
| If this rate of I/O is not met, the job will exit. The same format as \fBrate\fR |
| is used for read vs write vs trim separation. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate_process \fR=\fPstr |
| This option controls how fio manages rated IO submissions. The default is |
| \fBlinear\fR, which submits IO in a linear fashion with fixed delays between |
| IOs that gets adjusted based on IO completion rates. If this is set to |
| \fBpoisson\fR, fio will submit IO based on a more real world random request |
| flow, known as the Poisson process |
| (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_process). The lambda will be |
| 10^6 / IOPS for the given workload. |
| .TP |
| .BI rate_cycle \fR=\fPint |
| Average bandwidth for \fBrate\fR and \fBrate_min\fR over this number of |
| milliseconds. Default: 1000ms. |
| .TP |
| .BI latency_target \fR=\fPint |
| If set, fio will attempt to find the max performance point that the given |
| workload will run at while maintaining a latency below this target. The |
| values is given in microseconds. See \fBlatency_window\fR and |
| \fBlatency_percentile\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI latency_window \fR=\fPint |
| Used with \fBlatency_target\fR to specify the sample window that the job |
| is run at varying queue depths to test the performance. The value is given |
| in microseconds. |
| .TP |
| .BI latency_percentile \fR=\fPfloat |
| The percentage of IOs that must fall within the criteria specified by |
| \fBlatency_target\fR and \fBlatency_window\fR. If not set, this defaults |
| to 100.0, meaning that all IOs must be equal or below to the value set |
| by \fBlatency_target\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI max_latency \fR=\fPint |
| If set, fio will exit the job if it exceeds this maximum latency. It will exit |
| with an ETIME error. |
| .TP |
| .BI cpumask \fR=\fPint |
| Set CPU affinity for this job. \fIint\fR is a bitmask of allowed CPUs the job |
| may run on. See \fBsched_setaffinity\fR\|(2). |
| .TP |
| .BI cpus_allowed \fR=\fPstr |
| Same as \fBcpumask\fR, but allows a comma-delimited list of CPU numbers. |
| .TP |
| .BI cpus_allowed_policy \fR=\fPstr |
| Set the policy of how fio distributes the CPUs specified by \fBcpus_allowed\fR |
| or \fBcpumask\fR. Two policies are supported: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B shared |
| All jobs will share the CPU set specified. |
| .TP |
| .B split |
| Each job will get a unique CPU from the CPU set. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| \fBshared\fR is the default behaviour, if the option isn't specified. If |
| \fBsplit\fR is specified, then fio will assign one cpu per job. If not enough |
| CPUs are given for the jobs listed, then fio will roundrobin the CPUs in |
| the set. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .TP |
| .BI numa_cpu_nodes \fR=\fPstr |
| Set this job running on specified NUMA nodes' CPUs. The arguments allow |
| comma delimited list of cpu numbers, A-B ranges, or 'all'. |
| .TP |
| .BI numa_mem_policy \fR=\fPstr |
| Set this job's memory policy and corresponding NUMA nodes. Format of |
| the arguments: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B <mode>[:<nodelist>] |
| .TP |
| .B mode |
| is one of the following memory policy: |
| .TP |
| .B default, prefer, bind, interleave, local |
| .TP |
| .RE |
| For \fBdefault\fR and \fBlocal\fR memory policy, no \fBnodelist\fR is |
| needed to be specified. For \fBprefer\fR, only one node is |
| allowed. For \fBbind\fR and \fBinterleave\fR, \fBnodelist\fR allows |
| comma delimited list of numbers, A-B ranges, or 'all'. |
| .TP |
| .BI startdelay \fR=\fPirange |
| Delay start of job for the specified number of seconds. Supports all time |
| suffixes to allow specification of hours, minutes, seconds and |
| milliseconds - seconds are the default if a unit is omitted. |
| Can be given as a range which causes each thread to choose randomly out of the |
| range. |
| .TP |
| .BI runtime \fR=\fPint |
| Terminate processing after the specified number of seconds. |
| .TP |
| .B time_based |
| If given, run for the specified \fBruntime\fR duration even if the files are |
| completely read or written. The same workload will be repeated as many times |
| as \fBruntime\fR allows. |
| .TP |
| .BI ramp_time \fR=\fPint |
| If set, fio will run the specified workload for this amount of time before |
| logging any performance numbers. Useful for letting performance settle before |
| logging results, thus minimizing the runtime required for stable results. Note |
| that the \fBramp_time\fR is considered lead in time for a job, thus it will |
| increase the total runtime if a special timeout or runtime is specified. |
| .TP |
| .BI steadystate \fR=\fPstr:float "\fR,\fP ss" \fR=\fPstr:float |
| Define the criterion and limit for assessing steady state performance. The |
| first parameter designates the criterion whereas the second parameter sets the |
| threshold. When the criterion falls below the threshold for the specified |
| duration, the job will stop. For example, iops_slope:0.1% will direct fio |
| to terminate the job when the least squares regression slope falls below 0.1% |
| of the mean IOPS. If group_reporting is enabled this will apply to all jobs in |
| the group. All assessments are carried out using only data from the rolling |
| collection window. Threshold limits can be expressed as a fixed value or as a |
| percentage of the mean in the collection window. Below are the available steady |
| state assessment criteria. |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B iops |
| Collect IOPS data. Stop the job if all individual IOPS measurements are within |
| the specified limit of the mean IOPS (e.g., iops:2 means that all individual |
| IOPS values must be within 2 of the mean, whereas iops:0.2% means that all |
| individual IOPS values must be within 0.2% of the mean IOPS to terminate the |
| job). |
| .TP |
| .B iops_slope |
| Collect IOPS data and calculate the least squares regression slope. Stop the |
| job if the slope falls below the specified limit. |
| .TP |
| .B bw |
| Collect bandwidth data. Stop the job if all individual bandwidth measurements |
| are within the specified limit of the mean bandwidth. |
| .TP |
| .B bw_slope |
| Collect bandwidth data and calculate the least squares regression slope. Stop |
| the job if the slope falls below the specified limit. |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI steadystate_duration \fR=\fPtime "\fR,\fP ss_dur" \fR=\fPtime |
| A rolling window of this duration will be used to judge whether steady state |
| has been reached. Data will be collected once per second. The default is 0 |
| which disables steady state detection. |
| .TP |
| .BI steadystate_ramp_time \fR=\fPtime "\fR,\fP ss_ramp" \fR=\fPtime |
| Allow the job to run for the specified duration before beginning data collection |
| for checking the steady state job termination criterion. The default is 0. |
| .TP |
| .BI invalidate \fR=\fPbool |
| Invalidate buffer-cache for the file prior to starting I/O. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI sync \fR=\fPbool |
| Use synchronous I/O for buffered writes. For the majority of I/O engines, |
| this means using O_SYNC. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI iomem \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP mem" \fR=\fPstr |
| Allocation method for I/O unit buffer. Allowed values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B malloc |
| Allocate memory with \fBmalloc\fR\|(3). Default memory type. |
| .TP |
| .B shm |
| Use shared memory buffers allocated through \fBshmget\fR\|(2). |
| .TP |
| .B shmhuge |
| Same as \fBshm\fR, but use huge pages as backing. |
| .TP |
| .B mmap |
| Use \fBmmap\fR\|(2) for allocation. Uses anonymous memory unless a filename |
| is given after the option in the format `:\fIfile\fR'. |
| .TP |
| .B mmaphuge |
| Same as \fBmmap\fR, but use huge files as backing. |
| .TP |
| .B mmapshared |
| Same as \fBmmap\fR, but use a MMAP_SHARED mapping. |
| .TP |
| .B cudamalloc |
| Use GPU memory as the buffers for GPUDirect RDMA benchmark. The ioengine must be \fBrdma\fR. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| The amount of memory allocated is the maximum allowed \fBblocksize\fR for the |
| job multiplied by \fBiodepth\fR. For \fBshmhuge\fR or \fBmmaphuge\fR to work, |
| the system must have free huge pages allocated. \fBmmaphuge\fR also needs to |
| have hugetlbfs mounted, and \fIfile\fR must point there. At least on Linux, |
| huge pages must be manually allocated. See \fB/proc/sys/vm/nr_hugehages\fR |
| and the documentation for that. Normally you just need to echo an appropriate |
| number, eg echoing 8 will ensure that the OS has 8 huge pages ready for |
| use. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI iomem_align \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP mem_align" \fR=\fPint |
| This indicates the memory alignment of the IO memory buffers. Note that the |
| given alignment is applied to the first IO unit buffer, if using \fBiodepth\fR |
| the alignment of the following buffers are given by the \fBbs\fR used. In |
| other words, if using a \fBbs\fR that is a multiple of the page sized in the |
| system, all buffers will be aligned to this value. If using a \fBbs\fR that |
| is not page aligned, the alignment of subsequent IO memory buffers is the |
| sum of the \fBiomem_align\fR and \fBbs\fR used. |
| .TP |
| .BI hugepage\-size \fR=\fPint |
| Defines the size of a huge page. Must be at least equal to the system setting. |
| Should be a multiple of 1MiB. Default: 4MiB. |
| .TP |
| .B exitall |
| Terminate all jobs when one finishes. Default: wait for each job to finish. |
| .TP |
| .B exitall_on_error \fR=\fPbool |
| Terminate all jobs if one job finishes in error. Default: wait for each job |
| to finish. |
| .TP |
| .BI bwavgtime \fR=\fPint |
| Average bandwidth calculations over the given time in milliseconds. If the job |
| also does bandwidth logging through \fBwrite_bw_log\fR, then the minimum of |
| this option and \fBlog_avg_msec\fR will be used. Default: 500ms. |
| .TP |
| .BI iopsavgtime \fR=\fPint |
| Average IOPS calculations over the given time in milliseconds. If the job |
| also does IOPS logging through \fBwrite_iops_log\fR, then the minimum of |
| this option and \fBlog_avg_msec\fR will be used. Default: 500ms. |
| .TP |
| .BI create_serialize \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, serialize file creation for the jobs. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI create_fsync \fR=\fPbool |
| \fBfsync\fR\|(2) data file after creation. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI create_on_open \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, the files are not created until they are opened for IO by the job. |
| .TP |
| .BI create_only \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, fio will only run the setup phase of the job. If files need to be |
| laid out or updated on disk, only that will be done. The actual job contents |
| are not executed. |
| .TP |
| .BI allow_file_create \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, fio is permitted to create files as part of its workload. This is |
| the default behavior. If this option is false, then fio will error out if the |
| files it needs to use don't already exist. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI allow_mounted_write \fR=\fPbool |
| If this isn't set, fio will abort jobs that are destructive (eg that write) |
| to what appears to be a mounted device or partition. This should help catch |
| creating inadvertently destructive tests, not realizing that the test will |
| destroy data on the mounted file system. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI pre_read \fR=\fPbool |
| If this is given, files will be pre-read into memory before starting the given |
| IO operation. This will also clear the \fR \fBinvalidate\fR flag, since it is |
| pointless to pre-read and then drop the cache. This will only work for IO |
| engines that are seekable, since they allow you to read the same data |
| multiple times. Thus it will not work on eg network or splice IO. |
| .TP |
| .BI unlink \fR=\fPbool |
| Unlink job files when done. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI unlink_each_loop \fR=\fPbool |
| Unlink job files after each iteration or loop. Default: false. |
| .TP |
| .BI loops \fR=\fPint |
| Specifies the number of iterations (runs of the same workload) of this job. |
| Default: 1. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_only \fR=\fPbool |
| Do not perform the specified workload, only verify data still matches previous |
| invocation of this workload. This option allows one to check data multiple |
| times at a later date without overwriting it. This option makes sense only for |
| workloads that write data, and does not support workloads with the |
| \fBtime_based\fR option set. |
| .TP |
| .BI do_verify \fR=\fPbool |
| Run the verify phase after a write phase. Only valid if \fBverify\fR is set. |
| Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify \fR=\fPstr |
| Method of verifying file contents after each iteration of the job. Each |
| verification method also implies verification of special header, which is |
| written to the beginning of each block. This header also includes meta |
| information, like offset of the block, block number, timestamp when block |
| was written, etc. \fBverify\fR=str can be combined with \fBverify_pattern\fR=str |
| option. The allowed values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B md5 crc16 crc32 crc32c crc32c-intel crc64 crc7 sha256 sha512 sha1 sha3-224 sha3-256 sha3-384 sha3-512 xxhash |
| Store appropriate checksum in the header of each block. crc32c-intel is |
| hardware accelerated SSE4.2 driven, falls back to regular crc32c if |
| not supported by the system. |
| .TP |
| .B meta |
| This option is deprecated, since now meta information is included in generic |
| verification header and meta verification happens by default. For detailed |
| information see the description of the \fBverify\fR=str setting. This option |
| is kept because of compatibility's sake with old configurations. Do not use it. |
| .TP |
| .B pattern |
| Verify a strict pattern. Normally fio includes a header with some basic |
| information and checksumming, but if this option is set, only the |
| specific pattern set with \fBverify_pattern\fR is verified. |
| .TP |
| .B null |
| Pretend to verify. Used for testing internals. |
| .RE |
| |
| This option can be used for repeated burn-in tests of a system to make sure |
| that the written data is also correctly read back. If the data direction given |
| is a read or random read, fio will assume that it should verify a previously |
| written file. If the data direction includes any form of write, the verify will |
| be of the newly written data. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI verifysort \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, written verify blocks are sorted if \fBfio\fR deems it to be faster to |
| read them back in a sorted manner. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI verifysort_nr \fR=\fPint |
| Pre-load and sort verify blocks for a read workload. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_offset \fR=\fPint |
| Swap the verification header with data somewhere else in the block before |
| writing. It is swapped back before verifying. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_interval \fR=\fPint |
| Write the verification header for this number of bytes, which should divide |
| \fBblocksize\fR. Default: \fBblocksize\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_pattern \fR=\fPstr |
| If set, fio will fill the io buffers with this pattern. Fio defaults to filling |
| with totally random bytes, but sometimes it's interesting to fill with a known |
| pattern for io verification purposes. Depending on the width of the pattern, |
| fio will fill 1/2/3/4 bytes of the buffer at the time(it can be either a |
| decimal or a hex number). The verify_pattern if larger than a 32-bit quantity |
| has to be a hex number that starts with either "0x" or "0X". Use with |
| \fBverify\fP=str. Also, verify_pattern supports %o format, which means that for |
| each block offset will be written and then verified back, e.g.: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| \fBverify_pattern\fR=%o |
| .RE |
| Or use combination of everything: |
| .LP |
| .RS |
| \fBverify_pattern\fR=0xff%o"abcd"-21 |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_fatal \fR=\fPbool |
| If true, exit the job on the first observed verification failure. Default: |
| false. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_dump \fR=\fPbool |
| If set, dump the contents of both the original data block and the data block we |
| read off disk to files. This allows later analysis to inspect just what kind of |
| data corruption occurred. Off by default. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_async \fR=\fPint |
| Fio will normally verify IO inline from the submitting thread. This option |
| takes an integer describing how many async offload threads to create for IO |
| verification instead, causing fio to offload the duty of verifying IO contents |
| to one or more separate threads. If using this offload option, even sync IO |
| engines can benefit from using an \fBiodepth\fR setting higher than 1, as it |
| allows them to have IO in flight while verifies are running. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_async_cpus \fR=\fPstr |
| Tell fio to set the given CPU affinity on the async IO verification threads. |
| See \fBcpus_allowed\fP for the format used. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_backlog \fR=\fPint |
| Fio will normally verify the written contents of a job that utilizes verify |
| once that job has completed. In other words, everything is written then |
| everything is read back and verified. You may want to verify continually |
| instead for a variety of reasons. Fio stores the meta data associated with an |
| IO block in memory, so for large verify workloads, quite a bit of memory would |
| be used up holding this meta data. If this option is enabled, fio will write |
| only N blocks before verifying these blocks. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_backlog_batch \fR=\fPint |
| Control how many blocks fio will verify if verify_backlog is set. If not set, |
| will default to the value of \fBverify_backlog\fR (meaning the entire queue is |
| read back and verified). If \fBverify_backlog_batch\fR is less than |
| \fBverify_backlog\fR then not all blocks will be verified, if |
| \fBverify_backlog_batch\fR is larger than \fBverify_backlog\fR, some blocks |
| will be verified more than once. |
| .TP |
| .BI trim_percentage \fR=\fPint |
| Number of verify blocks to discard/trim. |
| .TP |
| .BI trim_verify_zero \fR=\fPbool |
| Verify that trim/discarded blocks are returned as zeroes. |
| .TP |
| .BI trim_backlog \fR=\fPint |
| Trim after this number of blocks are written. |
| .TP |
| .BI trim_backlog_batch \fR=\fPint |
| Trim this number of IO blocks. |
| .TP |
| .BI experimental_verify \fR=\fPbool |
| Enable experimental verification. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_state_save \fR=\fPbool |
| When a job exits during the write phase of a verify workload, save its |
| current state. This allows fio to replay up until that point, if the |
| verify state is loaded for the verify read phase. |
| .TP |
| .BI verify_state_load \fR=\fPbool |
| If a verify termination trigger was used, fio stores the current write |
| state of each thread. This can be used at verification time so that fio |
| knows how far it should verify. Without this information, fio will run |
| a full verification pass, according to the settings in the job file used. |
| .TP |
| .B stonewall "\fR,\fP wait_for_previous" |
| Wait for preceding jobs in the job file to exit before starting this one. |
| \fBstonewall\fR implies \fBnew_group\fR. |
| .TP |
| .B new_group |
| Start a new reporting group. If not given, all jobs in a file will be part |
| of the same reporting group, unless separated by a stonewall. |
| .TP |
| .BI stats \fR=\fPbool |
| By default, fio collects and shows final output results for all jobs that run. |
| If this option is set to 0, then fio will ignore it in the final stat output. |
| .TP |
| .BI numjobs \fR=\fPint |
| Number of clones (processes/threads performing the same workload) of this job. |
| Default: 1. |
| .TP |
| .B group_reporting |
| If set, display per-group reports instead of per-job when \fBnumjobs\fR is |
| specified. |
| .TP |
| .B thread |
| Use threads created with \fBpthread_create\fR\|(3) instead of processes created |
| with \fBfork\fR\|(2). |
| .TP |
| .BI zonesize \fR=\fPint |
| Divide file into zones of the specified size in bytes. See \fBzoneskip\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI zonerange \fR=\fPint |
| Give size of an IO zone. See \fBzoneskip\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI zoneskip \fR=\fPint |
| Skip the specified number of bytes when \fBzonesize\fR bytes of data have been |
| read. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_iolog \fR=\fPstr |
| Write the issued I/O patterns to the specified file. Specify a separate file |
| for each job, otherwise the iologs will be interspersed and the file may be |
| corrupt. |
| .TP |
| .BI read_iolog \fR=\fPstr |
| Replay the I/O patterns contained in the specified file generated by |
| \fBwrite_iolog\fR, or may be a \fBblktrace\fR binary file. |
| .TP |
| .BI replay_no_stall \fR=\fPint |
| While replaying I/O patterns using \fBread_iolog\fR the default behavior |
| attempts to respect timing information between I/Os. Enabling |
| \fBreplay_no_stall\fR causes I/Os to be replayed as fast as possible while |
| still respecting ordering. |
| .TP |
| .BI replay_redirect \fR=\fPstr |
| While replaying I/O patterns using \fBread_iolog\fR the default behavior |
| is to replay the IOPS onto the major/minor device that each IOP was recorded |
| from. Setting \fBreplay_redirect\fR causes all IOPS to be replayed onto the |
| single specified device regardless of the device it was recorded from. |
| .TP |
| .BI replay_align \fR=\fPint |
| Force alignment of IO offsets and lengths in a trace to this power of 2 value. |
| .TP |
| .BI replay_scale \fR=\fPint |
| Scale sector offsets down by this factor when replaying traces. |
| .TP |
| .BI per_job_logs \fR=\fPbool |
| If set, this generates bw/clat/iops log with per file private filenames. If |
| not set, jobs with identical names will share the log filename. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_bw_log \fR=\fPstr |
| If given, write a bandwidth log for this job. Can be used to store data of the |
| bandwidth of the jobs in their lifetime. The included fio_generate_plots script |
| uses gnuplot to turn these text files into nice graphs. See \fBwrite_lat_log\fR |
| for behaviour of given filename. For this option, the postfix is _bw.x.log, |
| where x is the index of the job (1..N, where N is the number of jobs). If |
| \fBper_job_logs\fR is false, then the filename will not include the job index. |
| See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR |
| section. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_lat_log \fR=\fPstr |
| Same as \fBwrite_bw_log\fR, but writes I/O completion latencies. If no |
| filename is given with this option, the default filename of |
| "jobname_type.x.log" is used, where x is the index of the job (1..N, where |
| N is the number of jobs). Even if the filename is given, fio will still |
| append the type of log. If \fBper_job_logs\fR is false, then the filename will |
| not include the job index. See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_hist_log \fR=\fPstr |
| Same as \fBwrite_lat_log\fR, but writes I/O completion latency histograms. If |
| no filename is given with this option, the default filename of |
| "jobname_clat_hist.x.log" is used, where x is the index of the job (1..N, where |
| N is the number of jobs). Even if the filename is given, fio will still append |
| the type of log. If \fBper_job_logs\fR is false, then the filename will not |
| include the job index. See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section. |
| .TP |
| .BI write_iops_log \fR=\fPstr |
| Same as \fBwrite_bw_log\fR, but writes IOPS. If no filename is given with this |
| option, the default filename of "jobname_type.x.log" is used, where x is the |
| index of the job (1..N, where N is the number of jobs). Even if the filename |
| is given, fio will still append the type of log. If \fBper_job_logs\fR is false, |
| then the filename will not include the job index. See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR |
| section. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_avg_msec \fR=\fPint |
| By default, fio will log an entry in the iops, latency, or bw log for every |
| IO that completes. When writing to the disk log, that can quickly grow to a |
| very large size. Setting this option makes fio average the each log entry |
| over the specified period of time, reducing the resolution of the log. See |
| \fBlog_max_value\fR as well. Defaults to 0, logging all entries. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_max_value \fR=\fPbool |
| If \fBlog_avg_msec\fR is set, fio logs the average over that window. If you |
| instead want to log the maximum value, set this option to 1. Defaults to |
| 0, meaning that averaged values are logged. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_hist_msec \fR=\fPint |
| Same as \fBlog_avg_msec\fR, but logs entries for completion latency histograms. |
| Computing latency percentiles from averages of intervals using \fBlog_avg_msec\fR |
| is innacurate. Setting this option makes fio log histogram entries over the |
| specified period of time, reducing log sizes for high IOPS devices while |
| retaining percentile accuracy. See \fBlog_hist_coarseness\fR as well. Defaults |
| to 0, meaning histogram logging is disabled. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_hist_coarseness \fR=\fPint |
| Integer ranging from 0 to 6, defining the coarseness of the resolution of the |
| histogram logs enabled with \fBlog_hist_msec\fR. For each increment in |
| coarseness, fio outputs half as many bins. Defaults to 0, for which histogram |
| logs contain 1216 latency bins. See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_offset \fR=\fPbool |
| If this is set, the iolog options will include the byte offset for the IO |
| entry as well as the other data values. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_compression \fR=\fPint |
| If this is set, fio will compress the IO logs as it goes, to keep the memory |
| footprint lower. When a log reaches the specified size, that chunk is removed |
| and compressed in the background. Given that IO logs are fairly highly |
| compressible, this yields a nice memory savings for longer runs. The downside |
| is that the compression will consume some background CPU cycles, so it may |
| impact the run. This, however, is also true if the logging ends up consuming |
| most of the system memory. So pick your poison. The IO logs are saved |
| normally at the end of a run, by decompressing the chunks and storing them |
| in the specified log file. This feature depends on the availability of zlib. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_compression_cpus \fR=\fPstr |
| Define the set of CPUs that are allowed to handle online log compression |
| for the IO jobs. This can provide better isolation between performance |
| sensitive jobs, and background compression work. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_store_compressed \fR=\fPbool |
| If set, fio will store the log files in a compressed format. They can be |
| decompressed with fio, using the \fB\-\-inflate-log\fR command line parameter. |
| The files will be stored with a \fB\.fz\fR suffix. |
| .TP |
| .BI log_unix_epoch \fR=\fPbool |
| If set, fio will log Unix timestamps to the log files produced by enabling |
| \fBwrite_type_log\fR for each log type, instead of the default zero-based |
| timestamps. |
| .TP |
| .BI block_error_percentiles \fR=\fPbool |
| If set, record errors in trim block-sized units from writes and trims and output |
| a histogram of how many trims it took to get to errors, and what kind of error |
| was encountered. |
| .TP |
| .BI disable_lat \fR=\fPbool |
| Disable measurements of total latency numbers. Useful only for cutting |
| back the number of calls to \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2), as that does impact performance at |
| really high IOPS rates. Note that to really get rid of a large amount of these |
| calls, this option must be used with disable_slat and disable_bw as well. |
| .TP |
| .BI disable_clat \fR=\fPbool |
| Disable measurements of completion latency numbers. See \fBdisable_lat\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI disable_slat \fR=\fPbool |
| Disable measurements of submission latency numbers. See \fBdisable_lat\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI disable_bw_measurement \fR=\fPbool |
| Disable measurements of throughput/bandwidth numbers. See \fBdisable_lat\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI lockmem \fR=\fPint |
| Pin the specified amount of memory with \fBmlock\fR\|(2). Can be used to |
| simulate a smaller amount of memory. The amount specified is per worker. |
| .TP |
| .BI exec_prerun \fR=\fPstr |
| Before running the job, execute the specified command with \fBsystem\fR\|(3). |
| .RS |
| Output is redirected in a file called \fBjobname.prerun.txt\fR |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI exec_postrun \fR=\fPstr |
| Same as \fBexec_prerun\fR, but the command is executed after the job completes. |
| .RS |
| Output is redirected in a file called \fBjobname.postrun.txt\fR |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI ioscheduler \fR=\fPstr |
| Attempt to switch the device hosting the file to the specified I/O scheduler. |
| .TP |
| .BI disk_util \fR=\fPbool |
| Generate disk utilization statistics if the platform supports it. Default: true. |
| .TP |
| .BI clocksource \fR=\fPstr |
| Use the given clocksource as the base of timing. The supported options are: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B gettimeofday |
| \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) |
| .TP |
| .B clock_gettime |
| \fBclock_gettime\fR\|(2) |
| .TP |
| .B cpu |
| Internal CPU clock source |
| .TP |
| .RE |
| .P |
| \fBcpu\fR is the preferred clocksource if it is reliable, as it is very fast |
| (and fio is heavy on time calls). Fio will automatically use this clocksource |
| if it's supported and considered reliable on the system it is running on, |
| unless another clocksource is specifically set. For x86/x86-64 CPUs, this |
| means supporting TSC Invariant. |
| .TP |
| .BI gtod_reduce \fR=\fPbool |
| Enable all of the \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) reducing options (disable_clat, disable_slat, |
| disable_bw) plus reduce precision of the timeout somewhat to really shrink the |
| \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) call count. With this option enabled, we only do about 0.4% of |
| the gtod() calls we would have done if all time keeping was enabled. |
| .TP |
| .BI gtod_cpu \fR=\fPint |
| Sometimes it's cheaper to dedicate a single thread of execution to just getting |
| the current time. Fio (and databases, for instance) are very intensive on |
| \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) calls. With this option, you can set one CPU aside for doing |
| nothing but logging current time to a shared memory location. Then the other |
| threads/processes that run IO workloads need only copy that segment, instead of |
| entering the kernel with a \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) call. The CPU set aside for doing |
| these time calls will be excluded from other uses. Fio will manually clear it |
| from the CPU mask of other jobs. |
| .TP |
| .BI ignore_error \fR=\fPstr |
| Sometimes you want to ignore some errors during test in that case you can specify |
| error list for each error type. |
| .br |
| ignore_error=READ_ERR_LIST,WRITE_ERR_LIST,VERIFY_ERR_LIST |
| .br |
| errors for given error type is separated with ':'. |
| Error may be symbol ('ENOSPC', 'ENOMEM') or an integer. |
| .br |
| Example: ignore_error=EAGAIN,ENOSPC:122 . |
| .br |
| This option will ignore EAGAIN from READ, and ENOSPC and 122(EDQUOT) from WRITE. |
| .TP |
| .BI error_dump \fR=\fPbool |
| If set dump every error even if it is non fatal, true by default. If disabled |
| only fatal error will be dumped |
| .TP |
| .BI profile \fR=\fPstr |
| Select a specific builtin performance test. |
| .TP |
| .BI cgroup \fR=\fPstr |
| Add job to this control group. If it doesn't exist, it will be created. |
| The system must have a mounted cgroup blkio mount point for this to work. If |
| your system doesn't have it mounted, you can do so with: |
| |
| # mount \-t cgroup \-o blkio none /cgroup |
| .TP |
| .BI cgroup_weight \fR=\fPint |
| Set the weight of the cgroup to this value. See the documentation that comes |
| with the kernel, allowed values are in the range of 100..1000. |
| .TP |
| .BI cgroup_nodelete \fR=\fPbool |
| Normally fio will delete the cgroups it has created after the job completion. |
| To override this behavior and to leave cgroups around after the job completion, |
| set cgroup_nodelete=1. This can be useful if one wants to inspect various |
| cgroup files after job completion. Default: false |
| .TP |
| .BI uid \fR=\fPint |
| Instead of running as the invoking user, set the user ID to this value before |
| the thread/process does any work. |
| .TP |
| .BI gid \fR=\fPint |
| Set group ID, see \fBuid\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI unit_base \fR=\fPint |
| Base unit for reporting. Allowed values are: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B 0 |
| Use auto-detection (default). |
| .TP |
| .B 8 |
| Byte based. |
| .TP |
| .B 1 |
| Bit based. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .TP |
| .BI flow_id \fR=\fPint |
| The ID of the flow. If not specified, it defaults to being a global flow. See |
| \fBflow\fR. |
| .TP |
| .BI flow \fR=\fPint |
| Weight in token-based flow control. If this value is used, then there is a |
| \fBflow counter\fR which is used to regulate the proportion of activity between |
| two or more jobs. fio attempts to keep this flow counter near zero. The |
| \fBflow\fR parameter stands for how much should be added or subtracted to the |
| flow counter on each iteration of the main I/O loop. That is, if one job has |
| \fBflow=8\fR and another job has \fBflow=-1\fR, then there will be a roughly |
| 1:8 ratio in how much one runs vs the other. |
| .TP |
| .BI flow_watermark \fR=\fPint |
| The maximum value that the absolute value of the flow counter is allowed to |
| reach before the job must wait for a lower value of the counter. |
| .TP |
| .BI flow_sleep \fR=\fPint |
| The period of time, in microseconds, to wait after the flow watermark has been |
| exceeded before retrying operations |
| .TP |
| .BI clat_percentiles \fR=\fPbool |
| Enable the reporting of percentiles of completion latencies. |
| .TP |
| .BI percentile_list \fR=\fPfloat_list |
| Overwrite the default list of percentiles for completion latencies and the |
| block error histogram. Each number is a floating number in the range (0,100], |
| and the maximum length of the list is 20. Use ':' to separate the |
| numbers. For example, \-\-percentile_list=99.5:99.9 will cause fio to |
| report the values of completion latency below which 99.5% and 99.9% of |
| the observed latencies fell, respectively. |
| .SS "Ioengine Parameters List" |
| Some parameters are only valid when a specific ioengine is in use. These are |
| used identically to normal parameters, with the caveat that when used on the |
| command line, they must come after the ioengine. |
| .TP |
| .BI (cpuio)cpuload \fR=\fPint |
| Attempt to use the specified percentage of CPU cycles. |
| .TP |
| .BI (cpuio)cpuchunks \fR=\fPint |
| Split the load into cycles of the given time. In microseconds. |
| .TP |
| .BI (cpuio)exit_on_io_done \fR=\fPbool |
| Detect when IO threads are done, then exit. |
| .TP |
| .BI (libaio)userspace_reap |
| Normally, with the libaio engine in use, fio will use |
| the io_getevents system call to reap newly returned events. |
| With this flag turned on, the AIO ring will be read directly |
| from user-space to reap events. The reaping mode is only |
| enabled when polling for a minimum of 0 events (eg when |
| iodepth_batch_complete=0). |
| .TP |
| .BI (pvsync2)hipri |
| Set RWF_HIPRI on IO, indicating to the kernel that it's of |
| higher priority than normal. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)hostname \fR=\fPstr |
| The host name or IP address to use for TCP or UDP based IO. |
| If the job is a TCP listener or UDP reader, the hostname is not |
| used and must be omitted unless it is a valid UDP multicast address. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)port \fR=\fPint |
| The TCP or UDP port to bind to or connect to. If this is used with |
| \fBnumjobs\fR to spawn multiple instances of the same job type, then |
| this will be the starting port number since fio will use a range of ports. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)interface \fR=\fPstr |
| The IP address of the network interface used to send or receive UDP multicast |
| packets. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)ttl \fR=\fPint |
| Time-to-live value for outgoing UDP multicast packets. Default: 1 |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)nodelay \fR=\fPbool |
| Set TCP_NODELAY on TCP connections. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)protocol \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP proto" \fR=\fPstr |
| The network protocol to use. Accepted values are: |
| .RS |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B tcp |
| Transmission control protocol |
| .TP |
| .B tcpv6 |
| Transmission control protocol V6 |
| .TP |
| .B udp |
| User datagram protocol |
| .TP |
| .B udpv6 |
| User datagram protocol V6 |
| .TP |
| .B unix |
| UNIX domain socket |
| .RE |
| .P |
| When the protocol is TCP or UDP, the port must also be given, |
| as well as the hostname if the job is a TCP listener or UDP |
| reader. For unix sockets, the normal filename option should be |
| used and the port is invalid. |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI (net,netsplice)listen |
| For TCP network connections, tell fio to listen for incoming |
| connections rather than initiating an outgoing connection. The |
| hostname must be omitted if this option is used. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net, pingpong) \fR=\fPbool |
| Normally a network writer will just continue writing data, and a network reader |
| will just consume packets. If pingpong=1 is set, a writer will send its normal |
| payload to the reader, then wait for the reader to send the same payload back. |
| This allows fio to measure network latencies. The submission and completion |
| latencies then measure local time spent sending or receiving, and the |
| completion latency measures how long it took for the other end to receive and |
| send back. For UDP multicast traffic pingpong=1 should only be set for a single |
| reader when multiple readers are listening to the same address. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net, window_size) \fR=\fPint |
| Set the desired socket buffer size for the connection. |
| .TP |
| .BI (net, mss) \fR=\fPint |
| Set the TCP maximum segment size (TCP_MAXSEG). |
| .TP |
| .BI (e4defrag,donorname) \fR=\fPstr |
| File will be used as a block donor (swap extents between files) |
| .TP |
| .BI (e4defrag,inplace) \fR=\fPint |
| Configure donor file block allocation strategy |
| .RS |
| .BI 0(default) : |
| Preallocate donor's file on init |
| .TP |
| .BI 1: |
| allocate space immediately inside defragment event, and free right after event |
| .RE |
| .TP |
| .BI (rbd)clustername \fR=\fPstr |
| Specifies the name of the ceph cluster. |
| .TP |
| .BI (rbd)rbdname \fR=\fPstr |
| Specifies the name of the RBD. |
| .TP |
| .BI (rbd)pool \fR=\fPstr |
| Specifies the name of the Ceph pool containing the RBD. |
| .TP |
| .BI (rbd)clientname \fR=\fPstr |
| Specifies the username (without the 'client.' prefix) used to access the Ceph |
| cluster. If the clustername is specified, the clientname shall be the full |
| type.id string. If no type. prefix is given, fio will add 'client.' by default. |
| .TP |
| .BI (mtd)skipbad \fR=\fPbool |
| Skip operations against known bad blocks. |
| .SH OUTPUT |
| While running, \fBfio\fR will display the status of the created jobs. For |
| example: |
| .RS |
| .P |
| Jobs: 1: [_r] [24.8% done] [ 13509/ 8334 kb/s] [eta 00h:01m:31s] |
| .RE |
| .P |
| The characters in the first set of brackets denote the current status of each |
| threads. The possible values are: |
| .P |
| .PD 0 |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B P |
| Setup but not started. |
| .TP |
| .B C |
| Thread created. |
| .TP |
| .B I |
| Initialized, waiting. |
| .TP |
| .B R |
| Running, doing sequential reads. |
| .TP |
| .B r |
| Running, doing random reads. |
| .TP |
| .B W |
| Running, doing sequential writes. |
| .TP |
| .B w |
| Running, doing random writes. |
| .TP |
| .B M |
| Running, doing mixed sequential reads/writes. |
| .TP |
| .B m |
| Running, doing mixed random reads/writes. |
| .TP |
| .B F |
| Running, currently waiting for \fBfsync\fR\|(2). |
| .TP |
| .B V |
| Running, verifying written data. |
| .TP |
| .B E |
| Exited, not reaped by main thread. |
| .TP |
| .B \- |
| Exited, thread reaped. |
| .RE |
| .PD |
| .P |
| The second set of brackets shows the estimated completion percentage of |
| the current group. The third set shows the read and write I/O rate, |
| respectively. Finally, the estimated run time of the job is displayed. |
| .P |
| When \fBfio\fR completes (or is interrupted by Ctrl-C), it will show data |
| for each thread, each group of threads, and each disk, in that order. |
| .P |
| Per-thread statistics first show the threads client number, group-id, and |
| error code. The remaining figures are as follows: |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B io |
| Number of megabytes of I/O performed. |
| .TP |
| .B bw |
| Average data rate (bandwidth). |
| .TP |
| .B runt |
| Threads run time. |
| .TP |
| .B slat |
| Submission latency minimum, maximum, average and standard deviation. This is |
| the time it took to submit the I/O. |
| .TP |
| .B clat |
| Completion latency minimum, maximum, average and standard deviation. This |
| is the time between submission and completion. |
| .TP |
| .B bw |
| Bandwidth minimum, maximum, percentage of aggregate bandwidth received, average |
| and standard deviation. |
| .TP |
| .B cpu |
| CPU usage statistics. Includes user and system time, number of context switches |
| this thread went through and number of major and minor page faults. The CPU |
| utilization numbers are averages for the jobs in that reporting group, while |
| the context and fault counters are summed. |
| .TP |
| .B IO depths |
| Distribution of I/O depths. Each depth includes everything less than (or equal) |
| to it, but greater than the previous depth. |
| .TP |
| .B IO issued |
| Number of read/write requests issued, and number of short read/write requests. |
| .TP |
| .B IO latencies |
| Distribution of I/O completion latencies. The numbers follow the same pattern |
| as \fBIO depths\fR. |
| .RE |
| .P |
| The group statistics show: |
| .PD 0 |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B io |
| Number of megabytes I/O performed. |
| .TP |
| .B aggrb |
| Aggregate bandwidth of threads in the group. |
| .TP |
| .B minb |
| Minimum average bandwidth a thread saw. |
| .TP |
| .B maxb |
| Maximum average bandwidth a thread saw. |
| .TP |
| .B mint |
| Shortest runtime of threads in the group. |
| .TP |
| .B maxt |
| Longest runtime of threads in the group. |
| .RE |
| .PD |
| .P |
| Finally, disk statistics are printed with reads first: |
| .PD 0 |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B ios |
| Number of I/Os performed by all groups. |
| .TP |
| .B merge |
| Number of merges in the I/O scheduler. |
| .TP |
| .B ticks |
| Number of ticks we kept the disk busy. |
| .TP |
| .B io_queue |
| Total time spent in the disk queue. |
| .TP |
| .B util |
| Disk utilization. |
| .RE |
| .PD |
| .P |
| It is also possible to get fio to dump the current output while it is |
| running, without terminating the job. To do that, send fio the \fBUSR1\fR |
| signal. |
| .SH TERSE OUTPUT |
| If the \fB\-\-minimal\fR / \fB\-\-append-terse\fR options are given, the |
| results will be printed/appended in a semicolon-delimited format suitable for |
| scripted use. |
| A job description (if provided) follows on a new line. Note that the first |
| number in the line is the version number. If the output has to be changed |
| for some reason, this number will be incremented by 1 to signify that |
| change. The fields are: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| .B terse version, fio version, jobname, groupid, error |
| .P |
| Read status: |
| .RS |
| .B Total I/O \fR(KiB)\fP, bandwidth \fR(KiB/s)\fP, IOPS, runtime \fR(ms)\fP |
| .P |
| Submission latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Completion latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Completion latency percentiles (20 fields): |
| .RS |
| .B Xth percentile=usec |
| .RE |
| Total latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Bandwidth: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .P |
| Write status: |
| .RS |
| .B Total I/O \fR(KiB)\fP, bandwidth \fR(KiB/s)\fP, IOPS, runtime \fR(ms)\fP |
| .P |
| Submission latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Completion latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Completion latency percentiles (20 fields): |
| .RS |
| .B Xth percentile=usec |
| .RE |
| Total latency: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| Bandwidth: |
| .RS |
| .B min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, standard deviation |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .P |
| CPU usage: |
| .RS |
| .B user, system, context switches, major page faults, minor page faults |
| .RE |
| .P |
| IO depth distribution: |
| .RS |
| .B <=1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, >=64 |
| .RE |
| .P |
| IO latency distribution: |
| .RS |
| Microseconds: |
| .RS |
| .B <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000 |
| .RE |
| Milliseconds: |
| .RS |
| .B <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000, 2000, >=2000 |
| .RE |
| .RE |
| .P |
| Disk utilization (1 for each disk used): |
| .RS |
| .B name, read ios, write ios, read merges, write merges, read ticks, write ticks, read in-queue time, write in-queue time, disk utilization percentage |
| .RE |
| .P |
| Error Info (dependent on continue_on_error, default off): |
| .RS |
| .B total # errors, first error code |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .B text description (if provided in config - appears on newline) |
| .RE |
| .SH TRACE FILE FORMAT |
| There are two trace file format that you can encounter. The older (v1) format |
| is unsupported since version 1.20-rc3 (March 2008). It will still be described |
| below in case that you get an old trace and want to understand it. |
| |
| In any case the trace is a simple text file with a single action per line. |
| |
| .P |
| .B Trace file format v1 |
| .RS |
| Each line represents a single io action in the following format: |
| |
| rw, offset, length |
| |
| where rw=0/1 for read/write, and the offset and length entries being in bytes. |
| |
| This format is not supported in Fio versions => 1.20-rc3. |
| |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .B Trace file format v2 |
| .RS |
| The second version of the trace file format was added in Fio version 1.17. |
| It allows one to access more then one file per trace and has a bigger set of |
| possible file actions. |
| |
| The first line of the trace file has to be: |
| |
| \fBfio version 2 iolog\fR |
| |
| Following this can be lines in two different formats, which are described below. |
| The file management format: |
| |
| \fBfilename action\fR |
| |
| The filename is given as an absolute path. The action can be one of these: |
| |
| .P |
| .PD 0 |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B add |
| Add the given filename to the trace |
| .TP |
| .B open |
| Open the file with the given filename. The filename has to have been previously |
| added with the \fBadd\fR action. |
| .TP |
| .B close |
| Close the file with the given filename. The file must have previously been |
| opened. |
| .RE |
| .PD |
| .P |
| |
| The file io action format: |
| |
| \fBfilename action offset length\fR |
| |
| The filename is given as an absolute path, and has to have been added and opened |
| before it can be used with this format. The offset and length are given in |
| bytes. The action can be one of these: |
| |
| .P |
| .PD 0 |
| .RS |
| .TP |
| .B wait |
| Wait for 'offset' microseconds. Everything below 100 is discarded. The time is |
| relative to the previous wait statement. |
| .TP |
| .B read |
| Read \fBlength\fR bytes beginning from \fBoffset\fR |
| .TP |
| .B write |
| Write \fBlength\fR bytes beginning from \fBoffset\fR |
| .TP |
| .B sync |
| fsync() the file |
| .TP |
| .B datasync |
| fdatasync() the file |
| .TP |
| .B trim |
| trim the given file from the given \fBoffset\fR for \fBlength\fR bytes |
| .RE |
| .PD |
| .P |
| |
| .SH CPU IDLENESS PROFILING |
| In some cases, we want to understand CPU overhead in a test. For example, |
| we test patches for the specific goodness of whether they reduce CPU usage. |
| fio implements a balloon approach to create a thread per CPU that runs at |
| idle priority, meaning that it only runs when nobody else needs the cpu. |
| By measuring the amount of work completed by the thread, idleness of each |
| CPU can be derived accordingly. |
| |
| An unit work is defined as touching a full page of unsigned characters. Mean |
| and standard deviation of time to complete an unit work is reported in "unit |
| work" section. Options can be chosen to report detailed percpu idleness or |
| overall system idleness by aggregating percpu stats. |
| |
| .SH VERIFICATION AND TRIGGERS |
| Fio is usually run in one of two ways, when data verification is done. The |
| first is a normal write job of some sort with verify enabled. When the |
| write phase has completed, fio switches to reads and verifies everything |
| it wrote. The second model is running just the write phase, and then later |
| on running the same job (but with reads instead of writes) to repeat the |
| same IO patterns and verify the contents. Both of these methods depend |
| on the write phase being completed, as fio otherwise has no idea how much |
| data was written. |
| |
| With verification triggers, fio supports dumping the current write state |
| to local files. Then a subsequent read verify workload can load this state |
| and know exactly where to stop. This is useful for testing cases where |
| power is cut to a server in a managed fashion, for instance. |
| |
| A verification trigger consists of two things: |
| |
| .RS |
| Storing the write state of each job |
| .LP |
| Executing a trigger command |
| .RE |
| |
| The write state is relatively small, on the order of hundreds of bytes |
| to single kilobytes. It contains information on the number of completions |
| done, the last X completions, etc. |
| |
| A trigger is invoked either through creation (\fBtouch\fR) of a specified |
| file in the system, or through a timeout setting. If fio is run with |
| \fB\-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/trigger-file\fR, then it will continually check for |
| the existence of /tmp/trigger-file. When it sees this file, it will |
| fire off the trigger (thus saving state, and executing the trigger |
| command). |
| |
| For client/server runs, there's both a local and remote trigger. If |
| fio is running as a server backend, it will send the job states back |
| to the client for safe storage, then execute the remote trigger, if |
| specified. If a local trigger is specified, the server will still send |
| back the write state, but the client will then execute the trigger. |
| |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .B Verification trigger example |
| .RS |
| |
| Lets say we want to run a powercut test on the remote machine 'server'. |
| Our write workload is in write-test.fio. We want to cut power to 'server' |
| at some point during the run, and we'll run this test from the safety |
| or our local machine, 'localbox'. On the server, we'll start the fio |
| backend normally: |
| |
| server# \fBfio \-\-server\fR |
| |
| and on the client, we'll fire off the workload: |
| |
| localbox$ \fBfio \-\-client=server \-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/my\-trigger \-\-trigger-remote="bash \-c "echo b > /proc/sysrq-triger""\fR |
| |
| We set \fB/tmp/my-trigger\fR as the trigger file, and we tell fio to execute |
| |
| \fBecho b > /proc/sysrq-trigger\fR |
| |
| on the server once it has received the trigger and sent us the write |
| state. This will work, but it's not \fIreally\fR cutting power to the server, |
| it's merely abruptly rebooting it. If we have a remote way of cutting |
| power to the server through IPMI or similar, we could do that through |
| a local trigger command instead. Lets assume we have a script that does |
| IPMI reboot of a given hostname, ipmi-reboot. On localbox, we could |
| then have run fio with a local trigger instead: |
| |
| localbox$ \fBfio \-\-client=server \-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/my\-trigger \-\-trigger="ipmi-reboot server"\fR |
| |
| For this case, fio would wait for the server to send us the write state, |
| then execute 'ipmi-reboot server' when that happened. |
| |
| .RE |
| .P |
| .B Loading verify state |
| .RS |
| To load store write state, read verification job file must contain |
| the verify_state_load option. If that is set, fio will load the previously |
| stored state. For a local fio run this is done by loading the files directly, |
| and on a client/server run, the server backend will ask the client to send |
| the files over and load them from there. |
| |
| .RE |
| |
| .SH LOG FILE FORMATS |
| |
| Fio supports a variety of log file formats, for logging latencies, bandwidth, |
| and IOPS. The logs share a common format, which looks like this: |
| |
| .B time (msec), value, data direction, offset |
| |
| Time for the log entry is always in milliseconds. The value logged depends |
| on the type of log, it will be one of the following: |
| |
| .P |
| .PD 0 |
| .TP |
| .B Latency log |
| Value is in latency in usecs |
| .TP |
| .B Bandwidth log |
| Value is in KiB/sec |
| .TP |
| .B IOPS log |
| Value is in IOPS |
| .PD |
| .P |
| |
| Data direction is one of the following: |
| |
| .P |
| .PD 0 |
| .TP |
| .B 0 |
| IO is a READ |
| .TP |
| .B 1 |
| IO is a WRITE |
| .TP |
| .B 2 |
| IO is a TRIM |
| .PD |
| .P |
| |
| The \fIoffset\fR is the offset, in bytes, from the start of the file, for that |
| particular IO. The logging of the offset can be toggled with \fBlog_offset\fR. |
| |
| If windowed logging is enabled through \fBlog_avg_msec\fR, then fio doesn't log |
| individual IOs. Instead of logs the average values over the specified |
| period of time. Since \fIdata direction\fR and \fIoffset\fR are per-IO values, |
| they aren't applicable if windowed logging is enabled. If windowed logging |
| is enabled and \fBlog_max_value\fR is set, then fio logs maximum values in |
| that window instead of averages. |
| |
| For histogram logging the logs look like this: |
| |
| .B time (msec), data direction, block-size, bin 0, bin 1, ..., bin 1215 |
| |
| Where 'bin i' gives the frequency of IO requests with a latency falling in |
| the i-th bin. See \fBlog_hist_coarseness\fR for logging fewer bins. |
| |
| .RE |
| |
| .SH CLIENT / SERVER |
| Normally you would run fio as a stand-alone application on the machine |
| where the IO workload should be generated. However, it is also possible to |
| run the frontend and backend of fio separately. This makes it possible to |
| have a fio server running on the machine(s) where the IO workload should |
| be running, while controlling it from another machine. |
| |
| To start the server, you would do: |
| |
| \fBfio \-\-server=args\fR |
| |
| on that machine, where args defines what fio listens to. The arguments |
| are of the form 'type:hostname or IP:port'. 'type' is either 'ip' (or ip4) |
| for TCP/IP v4, 'ip6' for TCP/IP v6, or 'sock' for a local unix domain |
| socket. 'hostname' is either a hostname or IP address, and 'port' is the port to |
| listen to (only valid for TCP/IP, not a local socket). Some examples: |
| |
| 1) \fBfio \-\-server\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on the default port (8765). |
| |
| 2) \fBfio \-\-server=ip:hostname,4444\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on IP belonging to hostname and on port 4444. |
| |
| 3) \fBfio \-\-server=ip6:::1,4444\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on IPv6 localhost ::1 and on port 4444. |
| |
| 4) \fBfio \-\-server=,4444\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on port 4444. |
| |
| 5) \fBfio \-\-server=1.2.3.4\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on IP 1.2.3.4 on the default port. |
| |
| 6) \fBfio \-\-server=sock:/tmp/fio.sock\fR |
| |
| Start a fio server, listening on the local socket /tmp/fio.sock. |
| |
| When a server is running, you can connect to it from a client. The client |
| is run with: |
| |
| \fBfio \-\-local-args \-\-client=server \-\-remote-args <job file(s)>\fR |
| |
| where \-\-local-args are arguments that are local to the client where it is |
| running, 'server' is the connect string, and \-\-remote-args and <job file(s)> |
| are sent to the server. The 'server' string follows the same format as it |
| does on the server side, to allow IP/hostname/socket and port strings. |
| You can connect to multiple clients as well, to do that you could run: |
| |
| \fBfio \-\-client=server2 \-\-client=server2 <job file(s)>\fR |
| |
| If the job file is located on the fio server, then you can tell the server |
| to load a local file as well. This is done by using \-\-remote-config: |
| |
| \fBfio \-\-client=server \-\-remote-config /path/to/file.fio\fR |
| |
| Then fio will open this local (to the server) job file instead |
| of being passed one from the client. |
| |
| If you have many servers (example: 100 VMs/containers), you can input a pathname |
| of a file containing host IPs/names as the parameter value for the \-\-client option. |
| For example, here is an example "host.list" file containing 2 hostnames: |
| |
| host1.your.dns.domain |
| .br |
| host2.your.dns.domain |
| |
| The fio command would then be: |
| |
| \fBfio \-\-client=host.list <job file>\fR |
| |
| In this mode, you cannot input server-specific parameters or job files, and all |
| servers receive the same job file. |
| |
| In order to enable fio \-\-client runs utilizing a shared filesystem from multiple hosts, |
| fio \-\-client now prepends the IP address of the server to the filename. For example, |
| if fio is using directory /mnt/nfs/fio and is writing filename fileio.tmp, |
| with a \-\-client hostfile |
| containing two hostnames h1 and h2 with IP addresses 192.168.10.120 and 192.168.10.121, then |
| fio will create two files: |
| |
| /mnt/nfs/fio/192.168.10.120.fileio.tmp |
| .br |
| /mnt/nfs/fio/192.168.10.121.fileio.tmp |
| |
| .SH AUTHORS |
| |
| .B fio |
| was written by Jens Axboe <jens.axboe@oracle.com>, |
| now Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>. |
| .br |
| This man page was written by Aaron Carroll <aaronc@cse.unsw.edu.au> based |
| on documentation by Jens Axboe. |
| .SH "REPORTING BUGS" |
| Report bugs to the \fBfio\fR mailing list <fio@vger.kernel.org>. |
| See \fBREADME\fR. |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| For further documentation see \fBHOWTO\fR and \fBREADME\fR. |
| .br |
| Sample jobfiles are available in the \fBexamples\fR directory. |
| .br |
| These are typically located under /usr/share/doc/fio. |
| |
| \fBHOWTO\fR: http://git.kernel.dk/?p=fio.git;a=blob_plain;f=HOWTO |
| .br |
| \fBREADME\fR: http://git.kernel.dk/?p=fio.git;a=blob_plain;f=README |
| .br |