zbd: Fix test scripts
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1.TH fio 1 "August 2017" "User Manual"
2.SH NAME
3fio \- flexible I/O tester
4.SH SYNOPSIS
5.B fio
6[\fIoptions\fR] [\fIjobfile\fR]...
7.SH DESCRIPTION
8.B fio
9is a tool that will spawn a number of threads or processes doing a
10particular type of I/O action as specified by the user.
11The typical use of fio is to write a job file matching the I/O load
12one wants to simulate.
13.SH OPTIONS
14.TP
15.BI \-\-debug \fR=\fPtype
16Enable verbose tracing \fItype\fR of various fio actions. May be `all' for all \fItype\fRs
17or individual types separated by a comma (e.g. `\-\-debug=file,mem' will enable
18file and memory debugging). `help' will list all available tracing options.
19.TP
20.BI \-\-parse\-only
21Parse options only, don't start any I/O.
22.TP
23.BI \-\-output \fR=\fPfilename
24Write output to \fIfilename\fR.
25.TP
26.BI \-\-output\-format \fR=\fPformat
27Set the reporting \fIformat\fR to `normal', `terse', `json', or
28`json+'. Multiple formats can be selected, separate by a comma. `terse'
29is a CSV based format. `json+' is like `json', except it adds a full
30dump of the latency buckets.
31.TP
32.BI \-\-bandwidth\-log
33Generate aggregate bandwidth logs.
34.TP
35.BI \-\-minimal
36Print statistics in a terse, semicolon\-delimited format.
37.TP
38.BI \-\-append\-terse
39Print statistics in selected mode AND terse, semicolon\-delimited format.
40\fBDeprecated\fR, use \fB\-\-output\-format\fR instead to select multiple formats.
41.TP
42.BI \-\-terse\-version \fR=\fPversion
43Set terse \fIversion\fR output format (default `3', or `2', `4', `5').
44.TP
45.BI \-\-version
46Print version information and exit.
47.TP
48.BI \-\-help
49Print a summary of the command line options and exit.
50.TP
51.BI \-\-cpuclock\-test
52Perform test and validation of internal CPU clock.
53.TP
54.BI \-\-crctest \fR=\fP[test]
55Test the speed of the built\-in checksumming functions. If no argument is given,
56all of them are tested. Alternatively, a comma separated list can be passed, in which
57case the given ones are tested.
58.TP
59.BI \-\-cmdhelp \fR=\fPcommand
60Print help information for \fIcommand\fR. May be `all' for all commands.
61.TP
62.BI \-\-enghelp \fR=\fP[ioengine[,command]]
63List all commands defined by \fIioengine\fR, or print help for \fIcommand\fR
64defined by \fIioengine\fR. If no \fIioengine\fR is given, list all
65available ioengines.
66.TP
67.BI \-\-showcmd \fR=\fPjobfile
68Convert \fIjobfile\fR to a set of command\-line options.
69.TP
70.BI \-\-readonly
71Turn on safety read\-only checks, preventing writes and trims. The \fB\-\-readonly\fR
72option is an extra safety guard to prevent users from accidentally starting
73a write or trim workload when that is not desired. Fio will only modify the
74device under test if `rw=write/randwrite/rw/randrw/trim/randtrim/trimwrite'
75is given. This safety net can be used as an extra precaution.
76.TP
77.BI \-\-eta \fR=\fPwhen
78Specifies when real\-time ETA estimate should be printed. \fIwhen\fR may
79be `always', `never' or `auto'. `auto' is the default, it prints ETA when
80requested if the output is a TTY. `always' disregards the output type, and
81prints ETA when requested. `never' never prints ETA.
82.TP
83.BI \-\-eta\-interval \fR=\fPtime
84By default, fio requests client ETA status roughly every second. With this
85option, the interval is configurable. Fio imposes a minimum allowed time to
86avoid flooding the console, less than 250 msec is not supported.
87.TP
88.BI \-\-eta\-newline \fR=\fPtime
89Force a new line for every \fItime\fR period passed. When the unit is omitted,
90the value is interpreted in seconds.
91.TP
92.BI \-\-status\-interval \fR=\fPtime
93Force a full status dump of cumulative (from job start) values at \fItime\fR
94intervals. This option does *not* provide per-period measurements. So
95values such as bandwidth are running averages. When the time unit is omitted,
96\fItime\fR is interpreted in seconds.
97.TP
98.BI \-\-section \fR=\fPname
99Only run specified section \fIname\fR in job file. Multiple sections can be specified.
100The \fB\-\-section\fR option allows one to combine related jobs into one file.
101E.g. one job file could define light, moderate, and heavy sections. Tell
102fio to run only the "heavy" section by giving `\-\-section=heavy'
103command line option. One can also specify the "write" operations in one
104section and "verify" operation in another section. The \fB\-\-section\fR option
105only applies to job sections. The reserved *global* section is always
106parsed and used.
107.TP
108.BI \-\-alloc\-size \fR=\fPkb
109Set the internal smalloc pool size to \fIkb\fR in KiB. The
110\fB\-\-alloc\-size\fR switch allows one to use a larger pool size for smalloc.
111If running large jobs with randommap enabled, fio can run out of memory.
112Smalloc is an internal allocator for shared structures from a fixed size
113memory pool and can grow to 16 pools. The pool size defaults to 16MiB.
114NOTE: While running `.fio_smalloc.*' backing store files are visible
115in `/tmp'.
116.TP
117.BI \-\-warnings\-fatal
118All fio parser warnings are fatal, causing fio to exit with an error.
119.TP
120.BI \-\-max\-jobs \fR=\fPnr
121Set the maximum number of threads/processes to support to \fInr\fR.
122NOTE: On Linux, it may be necessary to increase the shared-memory limit
123(`/proc/sys/kernel/shmmax') if fio runs into errors while creating jobs.
124.TP
125.BI \-\-server \fR=\fPargs
126Start a backend server, with \fIargs\fR specifying what to listen to.
127See \fBCLIENT/SERVER\fR section.
128.TP
129.BI \-\-daemonize \fR=\fPpidfile
130Background a fio server, writing the pid to the given \fIpidfile\fR file.
131.TP
132.BI \-\-client \fR=\fPhostname
133Instead of running the jobs locally, send and run them on the given \fIhostname\fR
134or set of \fIhostname\fRs. See \fBCLIENT/SERVER\fR section.
135.TP
136.BI \-\-remote\-config \fR=\fPfile
137Tell fio server to load this local \fIfile\fR.
138.TP
139.BI \-\-idle\-prof \fR=\fPoption
140Report CPU idleness. \fIoption\fR is one of the following:
141.RS
142.RS
143.TP
144.B calibrate
145Run unit work calibration only and exit.
146.TP
147.B system
148Show aggregate system idleness and unit work.
149.TP
150.B percpu
151As \fBsystem\fR but also show per CPU idleness.
152.RE
153.RE
154.TP
155.BI \-\-inflate\-log \fR=\fPlog
156Inflate and output compressed \fIlog\fR.
157.TP
158.BI \-\-trigger\-file \fR=\fPfile
159Execute trigger command when \fIfile\fR exists.
160.TP
161.BI \-\-trigger\-timeout \fR=\fPtime
162Execute trigger at this \fItime\fR.
163.TP
164.BI \-\-trigger \fR=\fPcommand
165Set this \fIcommand\fR as local trigger.
166.TP
167.BI \-\-trigger\-remote \fR=\fPcommand
168Set this \fIcommand\fR as remote trigger.
169.TP
170.BI \-\-aux\-path \fR=\fPpath
171Use the directory specified by \fIpath\fP for generated state files instead
172of the current working directory.
173.SH "JOB FILE FORMAT"
174Any parameters following the options will be assumed to be job files, unless
175they match a job file parameter. Multiple job files can be listed and each job
176file will be regarded as a separate group. Fio will \fBstonewall\fR execution
177between each group.
178
179Fio accepts one or more job files describing what it is
180supposed to do. The job file format is the classic ini file, where the names
181enclosed in [] brackets define the job name. You are free to use any ASCII name
182you want, except *global* which has special meaning. Following the job name is
183a sequence of zero or more parameters, one per line, that define the behavior of
184the job. If the first character in a line is a ';' or a '#', the entire line is
185discarded as a comment.
186
187A *global* section sets defaults for the jobs described in that file. A job may
188override a *global* section parameter, and a job file may even have several
189*global* sections if so desired. A job is only affected by a *global* section
190residing above it.
191
192The \fB\-\-cmdhelp\fR option also lists all options. If used with an \fIcommand\fR
193argument, \fB\-\-cmdhelp\fR will detail the given \fIcommand\fR.
194
195See the `examples/' directory for inspiration on how to write job files. Note
196the copyright and license requirements currently apply to
197`examples/' files.
198.SH "JOB FILE PARAMETERS"
199Some parameters take an option of a given type, such as an integer or a
200string. Anywhere a numeric value is required, an arithmetic expression may be
201used, provided it is surrounded by parentheses. Supported operators are:
202.RS
203.P
204.B addition (+)
205.P
206.B subtraction (\-)
207.P
208.B multiplication (*)
209.P
210.B division (/)
211.P
212.B modulus (%)
213.P
214.B exponentiation (^)
215.RE
216.P
217For time values in expressions, units are microseconds by default. This is
218different than for time values not in expressions (not enclosed in
219parentheses).
220.SH "PARAMETER TYPES"
221The following parameter types are used.
222.TP
223.I str
224String. A sequence of alphanumeric characters.
225.TP
226.I time
227Integer with possible time suffix. Without a unit value is interpreted as
228seconds unless otherwise specified. Accepts a suffix of 'd' for days, 'h' for
229hours, 'm' for minutes, 's' for seconds, 'ms' (or 'msec') for milliseconds and 'us'
230(or 'usec') for microseconds. For example, use 10m for 10 minutes.
231.TP
232.I int
233Integer. A whole number value, which may contain an integer prefix
234and an integer suffix.
235.RS
236.RS
237.P
238[*integer prefix*] **number** [*integer suffix*]
239.RE
240.P
241The optional *integer prefix* specifies the number's base. The default
242is decimal. *0x* specifies hexadecimal.
243.P
244The optional *integer suffix* specifies the number's units, and includes an
245optional unit prefix and an optional unit. For quantities of data, the
246default unit is bytes. For quantities of time, the default unit is seconds
247unless otherwise specified.
248.P
249With `kb_base=1000', fio follows international standards for unit
250prefixes. To specify power\-of\-10 decimal values defined in the
251International System of Units (SI):
252.RS
253.P
254.PD 0
255K means kilo (K) or 1000
256.P
257M means mega (M) or 1000**2
258.P
259G means giga (G) or 1000**3
260.P
261T means tera (T) or 1000**4
262.P
263P means peta (P) or 1000**5
264.PD
265.RE
266.P
267To specify power\-of\-2 binary values defined in IEC 80000\-13:
268.RS
269.P
270.PD 0
271Ki means kibi (Ki) or 1024
272.P
273Mi means mebi (Mi) or 1024**2
274.P
275Gi means gibi (Gi) or 1024**3
276.P
277Ti means tebi (Ti) or 1024**4
278.P
279Pi means pebi (Pi) or 1024**5
280.PD
281.RE
282.P
283With `kb_base=1024' (the default), the unit prefixes are opposite
284from those specified in the SI and IEC 80000\-13 standards to provide
285compatibility with old scripts. For example, 4k means 4096.
286.P
287For quantities of data, an optional unit of 'B' may be included
288(e.g., 'kB' is the same as 'k').
289.P
290The *integer suffix* is not case sensitive (e.g., m/mi mean mebi/mega,
291not milli). 'b' and 'B' both mean byte, not bit.
292.P
293Examples with `kb_base=1000':
294.RS
295.P
296.PD 0
2974 KiB: 4096, 4096b, 4096B, 4k, 4kb, 4kB, 4K, 4KB
298.P
2991 MiB: 1048576, 1m, 1024k
300.P
3011 MB: 1000000, 1mi, 1000ki
302.P
3031 TiB: 1073741824, 1t, 1024m, 1048576k
304.P
3051 TB: 1000000000, 1ti, 1000mi, 1000000ki
306.PD
307.RE
308.P
309Examples with `kb_base=1024' (default):
310.RS
311.P
312.PD 0
3134 KiB: 4096, 4096b, 4096B, 4k, 4kb, 4kB, 4K, 4KB
314.P
3151 MiB: 1048576, 1m, 1024k
316.P
3171 MB: 1000000, 1mi, 1000ki
318.P
3191 TiB: 1073741824, 1t, 1024m, 1048576k
320.P
3211 TB: 1000000000, 1ti, 1000mi, 1000000ki
322.PD
323.RE
324.P
325To specify times (units are not case sensitive):
326.RS
327.P
328.PD 0
329D means days
330.P
331H means hours
332.P
333M mean minutes
334.P
335s or sec means seconds (default)
336.P
337ms or msec means milliseconds
338.P
339us or usec means microseconds
340.PD
341.RE
342.P
343If the option accepts an upper and lower range, use a colon ':' or
344minus '\-' to separate such values. See \fIirange\fR parameter type.
345If the lower value specified happens to be larger than the upper value
346the two values are swapped.
347.RE
348.TP
349.I bool
350Boolean. Usually parsed as an integer, however only defined for
351true and false (1 and 0).
352.TP
353.I irange
354Integer range with suffix. Allows value range to be given, such as
3551024\-4096. A colon may also be used as the separator, e.g. 1k:4k. If the
356option allows two sets of ranges, they can be specified with a ',' or '/'
357delimiter: 1k\-4k/8k\-32k. Also see \fIint\fR parameter type.
358.TP
359.I float_list
360A list of floating point numbers, separated by a ':' character.
361.SH "JOB PARAMETERS"
362With the above in mind, here follows the complete list of fio job parameters.
363.SS "Units"
364.TP
365.BI kb_base \fR=\fPint
366Select the interpretation of unit prefixes in input parameters.
367.RS
368.RS
369.TP
370.B 1000
371Inputs comply with IEC 80000\-13 and the International
372System of Units (SI). Use:
373.RS
374.P
375.PD 0
376\- power\-of\-2 values with IEC prefixes (e.g., KiB)
377.P
378\- power\-of\-10 values with SI prefixes (e.g., kB)
379.PD
380.RE
381.TP
382.B 1024
383Compatibility mode (default). To avoid breaking old scripts:
384.P
385.RS
386.PD 0
387\- power\-of\-2 values with SI prefixes
388.P
389\- power\-of\-10 values with IEC prefixes
390.PD
391.RE
392.RE
393.P
394See \fBbs\fR for more details on input parameters.
395.P
396Outputs always use correct prefixes. Most outputs include both
397side\-by\-side, like:
398.P
399.RS
400bw=2383.3kB/s (2327.4KiB/s)
401.RE
402.P
403If only one value is reported, then kb_base selects the one to use:
404.P
405.RS
406.PD 0
4071000 \-\- SI prefixes
408.P
4091024 \-\- IEC prefixes
410.PD
411.RE
412.RE
413.TP
414.BI unit_base \fR=\fPint
415Base unit for reporting. Allowed values are:
416.RS
417.RS
418.TP
419.B 0
420Use auto\-detection (default).
421.TP
422.B 8
423Byte based.
424.TP
425.B 1
426Bit based.
427.RE
428.RE
429.SS "Job description"
430.TP
431.BI name \fR=\fPstr
432ASCII name of the job. This may be used to override the name printed by fio
433for this job. Otherwise the job name is used. On the command line this
434parameter has the special purpose of also signaling the start of a new job.
435.TP
436.BI description \fR=\fPstr
437Text description of the job. Doesn't do anything except dump this text
438description when this job is run. It's not parsed.
439.TP
440.BI loops \fR=\fPint
441Run the specified number of iterations of this job. Used to repeat the same
442workload a given number of times. Defaults to 1.
443.TP
444.BI numjobs \fR=\fPint
445Create the specified number of clones of this job. Each clone of job
446is spawned as an independent thread or process. May be used to setup a
447larger number of threads/processes doing the same thing. Each thread is
448reported separately; to see statistics for all clones as a whole, use
449\fBgroup_reporting\fR in conjunction with \fBnew_group\fR.
450See \fB\-\-max\-jobs\fR. Default: 1.
451.SS "Time related parameters"
452.TP
453.BI runtime \fR=\fPtime
454Tell fio to terminate processing after the specified period of time. It
455can be quite hard to determine for how long a specified job will run, so
456this parameter is handy to cap the total runtime to a given time. When
457the unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in seconds.
458.TP
459.BI time_based
460If set, fio will run for the duration of the \fBruntime\fR specified
461even if the file(s) are completely read or written. It will simply loop over
462the same workload as many times as the \fBruntime\fR allows.
463.TP
464.BI startdelay \fR=\fPirange(int)
465Delay the start of job for the specified amount of time. Can be a single
466value or a range. When given as a range, each thread will choose a value
467randomly from within the range. Value is in seconds if a unit is omitted.
468.TP
469.BI ramp_time \fR=\fPtime
470If set, fio will run the specified workload for this amount of time before
471logging any performance numbers. Useful for letting performance settle
472before logging results, thus minimizing the runtime required for stable
473results. Note that the \fBramp_time\fR is considered lead in time for a job,
474thus it will increase the total runtime if a special timeout or
475\fBruntime\fR is specified. When the unit is omitted, the value is
476given in seconds.
477.TP
478.BI clocksource \fR=\fPstr
479Use the given clocksource as the base of timing. The supported options are:
480.RS
481.RS
482.TP
483.B gettimeofday
484\fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2)
485.TP
486.B clock_gettime
487\fBclock_gettime\fR\|(2)
488.TP
489.B cpu
490Internal CPU clock source
491.RE
492.P
493\fBcpu\fR is the preferred clocksource if it is reliable, as it is very fast (and
494fio is heavy on time calls). Fio will automatically use this clocksource if
495it's supported and considered reliable on the system it is running on,
496unless another clocksource is specifically set. For x86/x86\-64 CPUs, this
497means supporting TSC Invariant.
498.RE
499.TP
500.BI gtod_reduce \fR=\fPbool
501Enable all of the \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) reducing options
502(\fBdisable_clat\fR, \fBdisable_slat\fR, \fBdisable_bw_measurement\fR) plus
503reduce precision of the timeout somewhat to really shrink the
504\fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) call count. With this option enabled, we only do
505about 0.4% of the \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) calls we would have done if all
506time keeping was enabled.
507.TP
508.BI gtod_cpu \fR=\fPint
509Sometimes it's cheaper to dedicate a single thread of execution to just
510getting the current time. Fio (and databases, for instance) are very
511intensive on \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) calls. With this option, you can set
512one CPU aside for doing nothing but logging current time to a shared memory
513location. Then the other threads/processes that run I/O workloads need only
514copy that segment, instead of entering the kernel with a
515\fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2) call. The CPU set aside for doing these time
516calls will be excluded from other uses. Fio will manually clear it from the
517CPU mask of other jobs.
518.SS "Target file/device"
519.TP
520.BI directory \fR=\fPstr
521Prefix \fBfilename\fRs with this directory. Used to place files in a different
522location than `./'. You can specify a number of directories by
523separating the names with a ':' character. These directories will be
524assigned equally distributed to job clones created by \fBnumjobs\fR as
525long as they are using generated filenames. If specific \fBfilename\fR(s) are
526set fio will use the first listed directory, and thereby matching the
527\fBfilename\fR semantic (which generates a file for each clone if not
528specified, but lets all clones use the same file if set).
529.RS
530.P
531See the \fBfilename\fR option for information on how to escape ':' and '\\'
532characters within the directory path itself.
533.P
534Note: To control the directory fio will use for internal state files
535use \fB\-\-aux\-path\fR.
536.RE
537.TP
538.BI filename \fR=\fPstr
539Fio normally makes up a \fBfilename\fR based on the job name, thread number, and
540file number (see \fBfilename_format\fR). If you want to share files
541between threads in a job or several
542jobs with fixed file paths, specify a \fBfilename\fR for each of them to override
543the default. If the ioengine is file based, you can specify a number of files
544by separating the names with a ':' colon. So if you wanted a job to open
545`/dev/sda' and `/dev/sdb' as the two working files, you would use
546`filename=/dev/sda:/dev/sdb'. This also means that whenever this option is
547specified, \fBnrfiles\fR is ignored. The size of regular files specified
548by this option will be \fBsize\fR divided by number of files unless an
549explicit size is specified by \fBfilesize\fR.
550.RS
551.P
552Each colon and backslash in the wanted path must be escaped with a '\\'
553character. For instance, if the path is `/dev/dsk/foo@3,0:c' then you
554would use `filename=/dev/dsk/foo@3,0\\:c' and if the path is
555`F:\\filename' then you would use `filename=F\\:\\\\filename'.
556.P
557On Windows, disk devices are accessed as `\\\\.\\PhysicalDrive0' for
558the first device, `\\\\.\\PhysicalDrive1' for the second etc.
559Note: Windows and FreeBSD prevent write access to areas
560of the disk containing in\-use data (e.g. filesystems).
561.P
562The filename `\-' is a reserved name, meaning *stdin* or *stdout*. Which
563of the two depends on the read/write direction set.
564.RE
565.TP
566.BI filename_format \fR=\fPstr
567If sharing multiple files between jobs, it is usually necessary to have fio
568generate the exact names that you want. By default, fio will name a file
569based on the default file format specification of
570`jobname.jobnumber.filenumber'. With this option, that can be
571customized. Fio will recognize and replace the following keywords in this
572string:
573.RS
574.RS
575.TP
576.B $jobname
577The name of the worker thread or process.
578.TP
579.B $jobnum
580The incremental number of the worker thread or process.
581.TP
582.B $filenum
583The incremental number of the file for that worker thread or process.
584.RE
585.P
586To have dependent jobs share a set of files, this option can be set to have
587fio generate filenames that are shared between the two. For instance, if
588`testfiles.$filenum' is specified, file number 4 for any job will be
589named `testfiles.4'. The default of `$jobname.$jobnum.$filenum'
590will be used if no other format specifier is given.
591.P
592If you specify a path then the directories will be created up to the main
593directory for the file. So for example if you specify `a/b/c/$jobnum` then the
594directories a/b/c will be created before the file setup part of the job. If you
595specify \fBdirectory\fR then the path will be relative that directory, otherwise
596it is treated as the absolute path.
597.RE
598.TP
599.BI unique_filename \fR=\fPbool
600To avoid collisions between networked clients, fio defaults to prefixing any
601generated filenames (with a directory specified) with the source of the
602client connecting. To disable this behavior, set this option to 0.
603.TP
604.BI opendir \fR=\fPstr
605Recursively open any files below directory \fIstr\fR.
606.TP
607.BI lockfile \fR=\fPstr
608Fio defaults to not locking any files before it does I/O to them. If a file
609or file descriptor is shared, fio can serialize I/O to that file to make the
610end result consistent. This is usual for emulating real workloads that share
611files. The lock modes are:
612.RS
613.RS
614.TP
615.B none
616No locking. The default.
617.TP
618.B exclusive
619Only one thread or process may do I/O at a time, excluding all others.
620.TP
621.B readwrite
622Read\-write locking on the file. Many readers may
623access the file at the same time, but writes get exclusive access.
624.RE
625.RE
626.TP
627.BI nrfiles \fR=\fPint
628Number of files to use for this job. Defaults to 1. The size of files
629will be \fBsize\fR divided by this unless explicit size is specified by
630\fBfilesize\fR. Files are created for each thread separately, and each
631file will have a file number within its name by default, as explained in
632\fBfilename\fR section.
633.TP
634.BI openfiles \fR=\fPint
635Number of files to keep open at the same time. Defaults to the same as
636\fBnrfiles\fR, can be set smaller to limit the number simultaneous
637opens.
638.TP
639.BI file_service_type \fR=\fPstr
640Defines how fio decides which file from a job to service next. The following
641types are defined:
642.RS
643.RS
644.TP
645.B random
646Choose a file at random.
647.TP
648.B roundrobin
649Round robin over opened files. This is the default.
650.TP
651.B sequential
652Finish one file before moving on to the next. Multiple files can
653still be open depending on \fBopenfiles\fR.
654.TP
655.B zipf
656Use a Zipf distribution to decide what file to access.
657.TP
658.B pareto
659Use a Pareto distribution to decide what file to access.
660.TP
661.B normal
662Use a Gaussian (normal) distribution to decide what file to access.
663.TP
664.B gauss
665Alias for normal.
666.RE
667.P
668For \fBrandom\fR, \fBroundrobin\fR, and \fBsequential\fR, a postfix can be appended to
669tell fio how many I/Os to issue before switching to a new file. For example,
670specifying `file_service_type=random:8' would cause fio to issue
6718 I/Os before selecting a new file at random. For the non\-uniform
672distributions, a floating point postfix can be given to influence how the
673distribution is skewed. See \fBrandom_distribution\fR for a description
674of how that would work.
675.RE
676.TP
677.BI ioscheduler \fR=\fPstr
678Attempt to switch the device hosting the file to the specified I/O scheduler
679before running.
680.TP
681.BI create_serialize \fR=\fPbool
682If true, serialize the file creation for the jobs. This may be handy to
683avoid interleaving of data files, which may greatly depend on the filesystem
684used and even the number of processors in the system. Default: true.
685.TP
686.BI create_fsync \fR=\fPbool
687\fBfsync\fR\|(2) the data file after creation. This is the default.
688.TP
689.BI create_on_open \fR=\fPbool
690If true, don't pre\-create files but allow the job's open() to create a file
691when it's time to do I/O. Default: false \-\- pre\-create all necessary files
692when the job starts.
693.TP
694.BI create_only \fR=\fPbool
695If true, fio will only run the setup phase of the job. If files need to be
696laid out or updated on disk, only that will be done \-\- the actual job contents
697are not executed. Default: false.
698.TP
699.BI allow_file_create \fR=\fPbool
700If true, fio is permitted to create files as part of its workload. If this
701option is false, then fio will error out if
702the files it needs to use don't already exist. Default: true.
703.TP
704.BI allow_mounted_write \fR=\fPbool
705If this isn't set, fio will abort jobs that are destructive (e.g. that write)
706to what appears to be a mounted device or partition. This should help catch
707creating inadvertently destructive tests, not realizing that the test will
708destroy data on the mounted file system. Note that some platforms don't allow
709writing against a mounted device regardless of this option. Default: false.
710.TP
711.BI pre_read \fR=\fPbool
712If this is given, files will be pre\-read into memory before starting the
713given I/O operation. This will also clear the \fBinvalidate\fR flag,
714since it is pointless to pre\-read and then drop the cache. This will only
715work for I/O engines that are seek\-able, since they allow you to read the
716same data multiple times. Thus it will not work on non\-seekable I/O engines
717(e.g. network, splice). Default: false.
718.TP
719.BI unlink \fR=\fPbool
720Unlink the job files when done. Not the default, as repeated runs of that
721job would then waste time recreating the file set again and again. Default:
722false.
723.TP
724.BI unlink_each_loop \fR=\fPbool
725Unlink job files after each iteration or loop. Default: false.
726.TP
727.BI zonemode \fR=\fPstr
728Accepted values are:
729.RS
730.RS
731.TP
732.B none
733The \fBzonerange\fR, \fBzonesize\fR and \fBzoneskip\fR parameters are ignored.
734.TP
735.B strided
736I/O happens in a single zone until \fBzonesize\fR bytes have been transferred.
737After that number of bytes has been transferred processing of the next zone
738starts.
739.TP
740.B zbd
741Zoned block device mode. I/O happens sequentially in each zone, even if random
742I/O has been selected. Random I/O happens across all zones instead of being
743restricted to a single zone.
744.RE
745.RE
746.TP
747.BI zonerange \fR=\fPint
748Size of a single zone. See also \fBzonesize\fR and \fBzoneskip\fR.
749.TP
750.BI zonesize \fR=\fPint
751For \fBzonemode\fR=strided, this is the number of bytes to transfer before
752skipping \fBzoneskip\fR bytes. If this parameter is smaller than
753\fBzonerange\fR then only a fraction of each zone with \fBzonerange\fR bytes
754will be accessed. If this parameter is larger than \fBzonerange\fR then each
755zone will be accessed multiple times before skipping to the next zone.
756
757For \fBzonemode\fR=zbd, this is the size of a single zone. The \fBzonerange\fR
758parameter is ignored in this mode.
759.TP
760.BI zoneskip \fR=\fPint
761For \fBzonemode\fR=strided, the number of bytes to skip after \fBzonesize\fR
762bytes of data have been transferred. This parameter must be zero for
763\fBzonemode\fR=zbd.
764
765.TP
766.BI read_beyond_wp \fR=\fPbool
767This parameter applies to \fBzonemode=zbd\fR only.
768
769Zoned block devices are block devices that consist of multiple zones. Each
770zone has a type, e.g. conventional or sequential. A conventional zone can be
771written at any offset that is a multiple of the block size. Sequential zones
772must be written sequentially. The position at which a write must occur is
773called the write pointer. A zoned block device can be either drive
774managed, host managed or host aware. For host managed devices the host must
775ensure that writes happen sequentially. Fio recognizes host managed devices
776and serializes writes to sequential zones for these devices.
777
778If a read occurs in a sequential zone beyond the write pointer then the zoned
779block device will complete the read without reading any data from the storage
780medium. Since such reads lead to unrealistically high bandwidth and IOPS
781numbers fio only reads beyond the write pointer if explicitly told to do
782so. Default: false.
783.TP
784.BI max_open_zones \fR=\fPint
785When running a random write test across an entire drive many more zones will be
786open than in a typical application workload. Hence this command line option
787that allows to limit the number of open zones. The number of open zones is
788defined as the number of zones to which write commands are issued.
789.TP
790.BI zone_reset_threshold \fR=\fPfloat
791A number between zero and one that indicates the ratio of logical blocks with
792data to the total number of logical blocks in the test above which zones
793should be reset periodically.
794.TP
795.BI zone_reset_frequency \fR=\fPfloat
796A number between zero and one that indicates how often a zone reset should be
797issued if the zone reset threshold has been exceeded. A zone reset is
798submitted after each (1 / zone_reset_frequency) write requests. This and the
799previous parameter can be used to simulate garbage collection activity.
800
801.SS "I/O type"
802.TP
803.BI direct \fR=\fPbool
804If value is true, use non\-buffered I/O. This is usually O_DIRECT. Note that
805OpenBSD and ZFS on Solaris don't support direct I/O. On Windows the synchronous
806ioengines don't support direct I/O. Default: false.
807.TP
808.BI atomic \fR=\fPbool
809If value is true, attempt to use atomic direct I/O. Atomic writes are
810guaranteed to be stable once acknowledged by the operating system. Only
811Linux supports O_ATOMIC right now.
812.TP
813.BI buffered \fR=\fPbool
814If value is true, use buffered I/O. This is the opposite of the
815\fBdirect\fR option. Defaults to true.
816.TP
817.BI readwrite \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP rw" \fR=\fPstr
818Type of I/O pattern. Accepted values are:
819.RS
820.RS
821.TP
822.B read
823Sequential reads.
824.TP
825.B write
826Sequential writes.
827.TP
828.B trim
829Sequential trims (Linux block devices and SCSI character devices only).
830.TP
831.B randread
832Random reads.
833.TP
834.B randwrite
835Random writes.
836.TP
837.B randtrim
838Random trims (Linux block devices and SCSI character devices only).
839.TP
840.B rw,readwrite
841Sequential mixed reads and writes.
842.TP
843.B randrw
844Random mixed reads and writes.
845.TP
846.B trimwrite
847Sequential trim+write sequences. Blocks will be trimmed first,
848then the same blocks will be written to.
849.RE
850.P
851Fio defaults to read if the option is not specified. For the mixed I/O
852types, the default is to split them 50/50. For certain types of I/O the
853result may still be skewed a bit, since the speed may be different.
854.P
855It is possible to specify the number of I/Os to do before getting a new
856offset by appending `:<nr>' to the end of the string given. For a
857random read, it would look like `rw=randread:8' for passing in an offset
858modifier with a value of 8. If the suffix is used with a sequential I/O
859pattern, then the `<nr>' value specified will be added to the generated
860offset for each I/O turning sequential I/O into sequential I/O with holes.
861For instance, using `rw=write:4k' will skip 4k for every write. Also see
862the \fBrw_sequencer\fR option.
863.RE
864.TP
865.BI rw_sequencer \fR=\fPstr
866If an offset modifier is given by appending a number to the `rw=\fIstr\fR'
867line, then this option controls how that number modifies the I/O offset
868being generated. Accepted values are:
869.RS
870.RS
871.TP
872.B sequential
873Generate sequential offset.
874.TP
875.B identical
876Generate the same offset.
877.RE
878.P
879\fBsequential\fR is only useful for random I/O, where fio would normally
880generate a new random offset for every I/O. If you append e.g. 8 to randread,
881you would get a new random offset for every 8 I/Os. The result would be a
882seek for only every 8 I/Os, instead of for every I/O. Use `rw=randread:8'
883to specify that. As sequential I/O is already sequential, setting
884\fBsequential\fR for that would not result in any differences. \fBidentical\fR
885behaves in a similar fashion, except it sends the same offset 8 number of
886times before generating a new offset.
887.RE
888.TP
889.BI unified_rw_reporting \fR=\fPbool
890Fio normally reports statistics on a per data direction basis, meaning that
891reads, writes, and trims are accounted and reported separately. If this
892option is set fio sums the results and report them as "mixed" instead.
893.TP
894.BI randrepeat \fR=\fPbool
895Seed the random number generator used for random I/O patterns in a
896predictable way so the pattern is repeatable across runs. Default: true.
897.TP
898.BI allrandrepeat \fR=\fPbool
899Seed all random number generators in a predictable way so results are
900repeatable across runs. Default: false.
901.TP
902.BI randseed \fR=\fPint
903Seed the random number generators based on this seed value, to be able to
904control what sequence of output is being generated. If not set, the random
905sequence depends on the \fBrandrepeat\fR setting.
906.TP
907.BI fallocate \fR=\fPstr
908Whether pre\-allocation is performed when laying down files.
909Accepted values are:
910.RS
911.RS
912.TP
913.B none
914Do not pre\-allocate space.
915.TP
916.B native
917Use a platform's native pre\-allocation call but fall back to
918\fBnone\fR behavior if it fails/is not implemented.
919.TP
920.B posix
921Pre\-allocate via \fBposix_fallocate\fR\|(3).
922.TP
923.B keep
924Pre\-allocate via \fBfallocate\fR\|(2) with
925FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE set.
926.TP
927.B 0
928Backward\-compatible alias for \fBnone\fR.
929.TP
930.B 1
931Backward\-compatible alias for \fBposix\fR.
932.RE
933.P
934May not be available on all supported platforms. \fBkeep\fR is only available
935on Linux. If using ZFS on Solaris this cannot be set to \fBposix\fR
936because ZFS doesn't support pre\-allocation. Default: \fBnative\fR if any
937pre\-allocation methods are available, \fBnone\fR if not.
938.RE
939.TP
940.BI fadvise_hint \fR=\fPstr
941Use \fBposix_fadvise\fR\|(2) or \fBposix_madvise\fR\|(2) to advise the kernel
942what I/O patterns are likely to be issued. Accepted values are:
943.RS
944.RS
945.TP
946.B 0
947Backwards compatible hint for "no hint".
948.TP
949.B 1
950Backwards compatible hint for "advise with fio workload type". This
951uses FADV_RANDOM for a random workload, and FADV_SEQUENTIAL
952for a sequential workload.
953.TP
954.B sequential
955Advise using FADV_SEQUENTIAL.
956.TP
957.B random
958Advise using FADV_RANDOM.
959.RE
960.RE
961.TP
962.BI write_hint \fR=\fPstr
963Use \fBfcntl\fR\|(2) to advise the kernel what life time to expect
964from a write. Only supported on Linux, as of version 4.13. Accepted
965values are:
966.RS
967.RS
968.TP
969.B none
970No particular life time associated with this file.
971.TP
972.B short
973Data written to this file has a short life time.
974.TP
975.B medium
976Data written to this file has a medium life time.
977.TP
978.B long
979Data written to this file has a long life time.
980.TP
981.B extreme
982Data written to this file has a very long life time.
983.RE
984.P
985The values are all relative to each other, and no absolute meaning
986should be associated with them.
987.RE
988.TP
989.BI offset \fR=\fPint
990Start I/O at the provided offset in the file, given as either a fixed size in
991bytes or a percentage. If a percentage is given, the generated offset will be
992aligned to the minimum \fBblocksize\fR or to the value of \fBoffset_align\fR if
993provided. Data before the given offset will not be touched. This
994effectively caps the file size at `real_size \- offset'. Can be combined with
995\fBsize\fR to constrain the start and end range of the I/O workload.
996A percentage can be specified by a number between 1 and 100 followed by '%',
997for example, `offset=20%' to specify 20%.
998.TP
999.BI offset_align \fR=\fPint
1000If set to non-zero value, the byte offset generated by a percentage \fBoffset\fR
1001is aligned upwards to this value. Defaults to 0 meaning that a percentage
1002offset is aligned to the minimum block size.
1003.TP
1004.BI offset_increment \fR=\fPint
1005If this is provided, then the real offset becomes `\fBoffset\fR + \fBoffset_increment\fR
1006* thread_number', where the thread number is a counter that starts at 0 and
1007is incremented for each sub\-job (i.e. when \fBnumjobs\fR option is
1008specified). This option is useful if there are several jobs which are
1009intended to operate on a file in parallel disjoint segments, with even
1010spacing between the starting points.
1011.TP
1012.BI number_ios \fR=\fPint
1013Fio will normally perform I/Os until it has exhausted the size of the region
1014set by \fBsize\fR, or if it exhaust the allocated time (or hits an error
1015condition). With this setting, the range/size can be set independently of
1016the number of I/Os to perform. When fio reaches this number, it will exit
1017normally and report status. Note that this does not extend the amount of I/O
1018that will be done, it will only stop fio if this condition is met before
1019other end\-of\-job criteria.
1020.TP
1021.BI fsync \fR=\fPint
1022If writing to a file, issue an \fBfsync\fR\|(2) (or its equivalent) of
1023the dirty data for every number of blocks given. For example, if you give 32
1024as a parameter, fio will sync the file after every 32 writes issued. If fio is
1025using non\-buffered I/O, we may not sync the file. The exception is the sg
1026I/O engine, which synchronizes the disk cache anyway. Defaults to 0, which
1027means fio does not periodically issue and wait for a sync to complete. Also
1028see \fBend_fsync\fR and \fBfsync_on_close\fR.
1029.TP
1030.BI fdatasync \fR=\fPint
1031Like \fBfsync\fR but uses \fBfdatasync\fR\|(2) to only sync data and
1032not metadata blocks. In Windows, FreeBSD, and DragonFlyBSD there is no
1033\fBfdatasync\fR\|(2) so this falls back to using \fBfsync\fR\|(2).
1034Defaults to 0, which means fio does not periodically issue and wait for a
1035data\-only sync to complete.
1036.TP
1037.BI write_barrier \fR=\fPint
1038Make every N\-th write a barrier write.
1039.TP
1040.BI sync_file_range \fR=\fPstr:int
1041Use \fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) for every \fIint\fR number of write
1042operations. Fio will track range of writes that have happened since the last
1043\fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) call. \fIstr\fR can currently be one or more of:
1044.RS
1045.RS
1046.TP
1047.B wait_before
1048SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE
1049.TP
1050.B write
1051SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE
1052.TP
1053.B wait_after
1054SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE_AFTER
1055.RE
1056.P
1057So if you do `sync_file_range=wait_before,write:8', fio would use
1058`SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE | SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE' for every 8
1059writes. Also see the \fBsync_file_range\fR\|(2) man page. This option is
1060Linux specific.
1061.RE
1062.TP
1063.BI overwrite \fR=\fPbool
1064If true, writes to a file will always overwrite existing data. If the file
1065doesn't already exist, it will be created before the write phase begins. If
1066the file exists and is large enough for the specified write phase, nothing
1067will be done. Default: false.
1068.TP
1069.BI end_fsync \fR=\fPbool
1070If true, \fBfsync\fR\|(2) file contents when a write stage has completed.
1071Default: false.
1072.TP
1073.BI fsync_on_close \fR=\fPbool
1074If true, fio will \fBfsync\fR\|(2) a dirty file on close. This differs
1075from \fBend_fsync\fR in that it will happen on every file close, not
1076just at the end of the job. Default: false.
1077.TP
1078.BI rwmixread \fR=\fPint
1079Percentage of a mixed workload that should be reads. Default: 50.
1080.TP
1081.BI rwmixwrite \fR=\fPint
1082Percentage of a mixed workload that should be writes. If both
1083\fBrwmixread\fR and \fBrwmixwrite\fR is given and the values do not
1084add up to 100%, the latter of the two will be used to override the
1085first. This may interfere with a given rate setting, if fio is asked to
1086limit reads or writes to a certain rate. If that is the case, then the
1087distribution may be skewed. Default: 50.
1088.TP
1089.BI random_distribution \fR=\fPstr:float[,str:float][,str:float]
1090By default, fio will use a completely uniform random distribution when asked
1091to perform random I/O. Sometimes it is useful to skew the distribution in
1092specific ways, ensuring that some parts of the data is more hot than others.
1093fio includes the following distribution models:
1094.RS
1095.RS
1096.TP
1097.B random
1098Uniform random distribution
1099.TP
1100.B zipf
1101Zipf distribution
1102.TP
1103.B pareto
1104Pareto distribution
1105.TP
1106.B normal
1107Normal (Gaussian) distribution
1108.TP
1109.B zoned
1110Zoned random distribution
1111.B zoned_abs
1112Zoned absolute random distribution
1113.RE
1114.P
1115When using a \fBzipf\fR or \fBpareto\fR distribution, an input value is also
1116needed to define the access pattern. For \fBzipf\fR, this is the `Zipf theta'.
1117For \fBpareto\fR, it's the `Pareto power'. Fio includes a test
1118program, \fBfio\-genzipf\fR, that can be used visualize what the given input
1119values will yield in terms of hit rates. If you wanted to use \fBzipf\fR with
1120a `theta' of 1.2, you would use `random_distribution=zipf:1.2' as the
1121option. If a non\-uniform model is used, fio will disable use of the random
1122map. For the \fBnormal\fR distribution, a normal (Gaussian) deviation is
1123supplied as a value between 0 and 100.
1124.P
1125For a \fBzoned\fR distribution, fio supports specifying percentages of I/O
1126access that should fall within what range of the file or device. For
1127example, given a criteria of:
1128.RS
1129.P
1130.PD 0
113160% of accesses should be to the first 10%
1132.P
113330% of accesses should be to the next 20%
1134.P
11358% of accesses should be to the next 30%
1136.P
11372% of accesses should be to the next 40%
1138.PD
1139.RE
1140.P
1141we can define that through zoning of the random accesses. For the above
1142example, the user would do:
1143.RS
1144.P
1145random_distribution=zoned:60/10:30/20:8/30:2/40
1146.RE
1147.P
1148A \fBzoned_abs\fR distribution works exactly like the\fBzoned\fR, except that
1149it takes absolute sizes. For example, let's say you wanted to define access
1150according to the following criteria:
1151.RS
1152.P
1153.PD 0
115460% of accesses should be to the first 20G
1155.P
115630% of accesses should be to the next 100G
1157.P
115810% of accesses should be to the next 500G
1159.PD
1160.RE
1161.P
1162we can define an absolute zoning distribution with:
1163.RS
1164.P
1165random_distribution=zoned:60/10:30/20:8/30:2/40
1166.RE
1167.P
1168For both \fBzoned\fR and \fBzoned_abs\fR, fio supports defining up to 256
1169separate zones.
1170.P
1171Similarly to how \fBbssplit\fR works for setting ranges and percentages
1172of block sizes. Like \fBbssplit\fR, it's possible to specify separate
1173zones for reads, writes, and trims. If just one set is given, it'll apply to
1174all of them.
1175.RE
1176.TP
1177.BI percentage_random \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
1178For a random workload, set how big a percentage should be random. This
1179defaults to 100%, in which case the workload is fully random. It can be set
1180from anywhere from 0 to 100. Setting it to 0 would make the workload fully
1181sequential. Any setting in between will result in a random mix of sequential
1182and random I/O, at the given percentages. Comma\-separated values may be
1183specified for reads, writes, and trims as described in \fBblocksize\fR.
1184.TP
1185.BI norandommap
1186Normally fio will cover every block of the file when doing random I/O. If
1187this option is given, fio will just get a new random offset without looking
1188at past I/O history. This means that some blocks may not be read or written,
1189and that some blocks may be read/written more than once. If this option is
1190used with \fBverify\fR and multiple blocksizes (via \fBbsrange\fR),
1191only intact blocks are verified, i.e., partially\-overwritten blocks are
1192ignored. With an async I/O engine and an I/O depth > 1, it is possible for
1193the same block to be overwritten, which can cause verification errors. Either
1194do not use norandommap in this case, or also use the lfsr random generator.
1195.TP
1196.BI softrandommap \fR=\fPbool
1197See \fBnorandommap\fR. If fio runs with the random block map enabled and
1198it fails to allocate the map, if this option is set it will continue without
1199a random block map. As coverage will not be as complete as with random maps,
1200this option is disabled by default.
1201.TP
1202.BI random_generator \fR=\fPstr
1203Fio supports the following engines for generating I/O offsets for random I/O:
1204.RS
1205.RS
1206.TP
1207.B tausworthe
1208Strong 2^88 cycle random number generator.
1209.TP
1210.B lfsr
1211Linear feedback shift register generator.
1212.TP
1213.B tausworthe64
1214Strong 64\-bit 2^258 cycle random number generator.
1215.RE
1216.P
1217\fBtausworthe\fR is a strong random number generator, but it requires tracking
1218on the side if we want to ensure that blocks are only read or written
1219once. \fBlfsr\fR guarantees that we never generate the same offset twice, and
1220it's also less computationally expensive. It's not a true random generator,
1221however, though for I/O purposes it's typically good enough. \fBlfsr\fR only
1222works with single block sizes, not with workloads that use multiple block
1223sizes. If used with such a workload, fio may read or write some blocks
1224multiple times. The default value is \fBtausworthe\fR, unless the required
1225space exceeds 2^32 blocks. If it does, then \fBtausworthe64\fR is
1226selected automatically.
1227.RE
1228.SS "Block size"
1229.TP
1230.BI blocksize \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] "\fR,\fB bs" \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
1231The block size in bytes used for I/O units. Default: 4096. A single value
1232applies to reads, writes, and trims. Comma\-separated values may be
1233specified for reads, writes, and trims. A value not terminated in a comma
1234applies to subsequent types. Examples:
1235.RS
1236.RS
1237.P
1238.PD 0
1239bs=256k means 256k for reads, writes and trims.
1240.P
1241bs=8k,32k means 8k for reads, 32k for writes and trims.
1242.P
1243bs=8k,32k, means 8k for reads, 32k for writes, and default for trims.
1244.P
1245bs=,8k means default for reads, 8k for writes and trims.
1246.P
1247bs=,8k, means default for reads, 8k for writes, and default for trims.
1248.PD
1249.RE
1250.RE
1251.TP
1252.BI blocksize_range \fR=\fPirange[,irange][,irange] "\fR,\fB bsrange" \fR=\fPirange[,irange][,irange]
1253A range of block sizes in bytes for I/O units. The issued I/O unit will
1254always be a multiple of the minimum size, unless
1255\fBblocksize_unaligned\fR is set.
1256Comma\-separated ranges may be specified for reads, writes, and trims as
1257described in \fBblocksize\fR. Example:
1258.RS
1259.RS
1260.P
1261bsrange=1k\-4k,2k\-8k
1262.RE
1263.RE
1264.TP
1265.BI bssplit \fR=\fPstr[,str][,str]
1266Sometimes you want even finer grained control of the block sizes issued, not
1267just an even split between them. This option allows you to weight various
1268block sizes, so that you are able to define a specific amount of block sizes
1269issued. The format for this option is:
1270.RS
1271.RS
1272.P
1273bssplit=blocksize/percentage:blocksize/percentage
1274.RE
1275.P
1276for as many block sizes as needed. So if you want to define a workload that
1277has 50% 64k blocks, 10% 4k blocks, and 40% 32k blocks, you would write:
1278.RS
1279.P
1280bssplit=4k/10:64k/50:32k/40
1281.RE
1282.P
1283Ordering does not matter. If the percentage is left blank, fio will fill in
1284the remaining values evenly. So a bssplit option like this one:
1285.RS
1286.P
1287bssplit=4k/50:1k/:32k/
1288.RE
1289.P
1290would have 50% 4k ios, and 25% 1k and 32k ios. The percentages always add up
1291to 100, if bssplit is given a range that adds up to more, it will error out.
1292.P
1293Comma\-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and trims as
1294described in \fBblocksize\fR.
1295.P
1296If you want a workload that has 50% 2k reads and 50% 4k reads, while having
129790% 4k writes and 10% 8k writes, you would specify:
1298.RS
1299.P
1300bssplit=2k/50:4k/50,4k/90:8k/10
1301.RE
1302.P
1303Fio supports defining up to 64 different weights for each data direction.
1304.RE
1305.TP
1306.BI blocksize_unaligned "\fR,\fB bs_unaligned"
1307If set, fio will issue I/O units with any size within
1308\fBblocksize_range\fR, not just multiples of the minimum size. This
1309typically won't work with direct I/O, as that normally requires sector
1310alignment.
1311.TP
1312.BI bs_is_seq_rand \fR=\fPbool
1313If this option is set, fio will use the normal read,write blocksize settings
1314as sequential,random blocksize settings instead. Any random read or write
1315will use the WRITE blocksize settings, and any sequential read or write will
1316use the READ blocksize settings.
1317.TP
1318.BI blockalign \fR=\fPint[,int][,int] "\fR,\fB ba" \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
1319Boundary to which fio will align random I/O units. Default:
1320\fBblocksize\fR. Minimum alignment is typically 512b for using direct
1321I/O, though it usually depends on the hardware block size. This option is
1322mutually exclusive with using a random map for files, so it will turn off
1323that option. Comma\-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and
1324trims as described in \fBblocksize\fR.
1325.SS "Buffers and memory"
1326.TP
1327.BI zero_buffers
1328Initialize buffers with all zeros. Default: fill buffers with random data.
1329.TP
1330.BI refill_buffers
1331If this option is given, fio will refill the I/O buffers on every
1332submit. The default is to only fill it at init time and reuse that
1333data. Only makes sense if zero_buffers isn't specified, naturally. If data
1334verification is enabled, \fBrefill_buffers\fR is also automatically enabled.
1335.TP
1336.BI scramble_buffers \fR=\fPbool
1337If \fBrefill_buffers\fR is too costly and the target is using data
1338deduplication, then setting this option will slightly modify the I/O buffer
1339contents to defeat normal de\-dupe attempts. This is not enough to defeat
1340more clever block compression attempts, but it will stop naive dedupe of
1341blocks. Default: true.
1342.TP
1343.BI buffer_compress_percentage \fR=\fPint
1344If this is set, then fio will attempt to provide I/O buffer content
1345(on WRITEs) that compresses to the specified level. Fio does this by
1346providing a mix of random data followed by fixed pattern data. The
1347fixed pattern is either zeros, or the pattern specified by
1348\fBbuffer_pattern\fR. If the \fBbuffer_pattern\fR option is used, it
1349might skew the compression ratio slightly. Setting
1350\fBbuffer_compress_percentage\fR to a value other than 100 will also
1351enable \fBrefill_buffers\fR in order to reduce the likelihood that
1352adjacent blocks are so similar that they over compress when seen
1353together. See \fBbuffer_compress_chunk\fR for how to set a finer or
1354coarser granularity of the random/fixed data regions. Defaults to unset
1355i.e., buffer data will not adhere to any compression level.
1356.TP
1357.BI buffer_compress_chunk \fR=\fPint
1358This setting allows fio to manage how big the random/fixed data region
1359is when using \fBbuffer_compress_percentage\fR. When
1360\fBbuffer_compress_chunk\fR is set to some non-zero value smaller than the
1361block size, fio can repeat the random/fixed region throughout the I/O
1362buffer at the specified interval (which particularly useful when
1363bigger block sizes are used for a job). When set to 0, fio will use a
1364chunk size that matches the block size resulting in a single
1365random/fixed region within the I/O buffer. Defaults to 512. When the
1366unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in bytes.
1367.TP
1368.BI buffer_pattern \fR=\fPstr
1369If set, fio will fill the I/O buffers with this pattern or with the contents
1370of a file. If not set, the contents of I/O buffers are defined by the other
1371options related to buffer contents. The setting can be any pattern of bytes,
1372and can be prefixed with 0x for hex values. It may also be a string, where
1373the string must then be wrapped with "". Or it may also be a filename,
1374where the filename must be wrapped with '' in which case the file is
1375opened and read. Note that not all the file contents will be read if that
1376would cause the buffers to overflow. So, for example:
1377.RS
1378.RS
1379.P
1380.PD 0
1381buffer_pattern='filename'
1382.P
1383or:
1384.P
1385buffer_pattern="abcd"
1386.P
1387or:
1388.P
1389buffer_pattern=\-12
1390.P
1391or:
1392.P
1393buffer_pattern=0xdeadface
1394.PD
1395.RE
1396.P
1397Also you can combine everything together in any order:
1398.RS
1399.P
1400buffer_pattern=0xdeadface"abcd"\-12'filename'
1401.RE
1402.RE
1403.TP
1404.BI dedupe_percentage \fR=\fPint
1405If set, fio will generate this percentage of identical buffers when
1406writing. These buffers will be naturally dedupable. The contents of the
1407buffers depend on what other buffer compression settings have been set. It's
1408possible to have the individual buffers either fully compressible, or not at
1409all \-\- this option only controls the distribution of unique buffers. Setting
1410this option will also enable \fBrefill_buffers\fR to prevent every buffer
1411being identical.
1412.TP
1413.BI invalidate \fR=\fPbool
1414Invalidate the buffer/page cache parts of the files to be used prior to
1415starting I/O if the platform and file type support it. Defaults to true.
1416This will be ignored if \fBpre_read\fR is also specified for the
1417same job.
1418.TP
1419.BI sync \fR=\fPbool
1420Use synchronous I/O for buffered writes. For the majority of I/O engines,
1421this means using O_SYNC. Default: false.
1422.TP
1423.BI iomem \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP mem" \fR=\fPstr
1424Fio can use various types of memory as the I/O unit buffer. The allowed
1425values are:
1426.RS
1427.RS
1428.TP
1429.B malloc
1430Use memory from \fBmalloc\fR\|(3) as the buffers. Default memory type.
1431.TP
1432.B shm
1433Use shared memory as the buffers. Allocated through \fBshmget\fR\|(2).
1434.TP
1435.B shmhuge
1436Same as \fBshm\fR, but use huge pages as backing.
1437.TP
1438.B mmap
1439Use \fBmmap\fR\|(2) to allocate buffers. May either be anonymous memory, or can
1440be file backed if a filename is given after the option. The format
1441is `mem=mmap:/path/to/file'.
1442.TP
1443.B mmaphuge
1444Use a memory mapped huge file as the buffer backing. Append filename
1445after mmaphuge, ala `mem=mmaphuge:/hugetlbfs/file'.
1446.TP
1447.B mmapshared
1448Same as \fBmmap\fR, but use a MMAP_SHARED mapping.
1449.TP
1450.B cudamalloc
1451Use GPU memory as the buffers for GPUDirect RDMA benchmark.
1452The \fBioengine\fR must be \fBrdma\fR.
1453.RE
1454.P
1455The area allocated is a function of the maximum allowed bs size for the job,
1456multiplied by the I/O depth given. Note that for \fBshmhuge\fR and
1457\fBmmaphuge\fR to work, the system must have free huge pages allocated. This
1458can normally be checked and set by reading/writing
1459`/proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages' on a Linux system. Fio assumes a huge page
1460is 4MiB in size. So to calculate the number of huge pages you need for a
1461given job file, add up the I/O depth of all jobs (normally one unless
1462\fBiodepth\fR is used) and multiply by the maximum bs set. Then divide
1463that number by the huge page size. You can see the size of the huge pages in
1464`/proc/meminfo'. If no huge pages are allocated by having a non\-zero
1465number in `nr_hugepages', using \fBmmaphuge\fR or \fBshmhuge\fR will fail. Also
1466see \fBhugepage\-size\fR.
1467.P
1468\fBmmaphuge\fR also needs to have hugetlbfs mounted and the file location
1469should point there. So if it's mounted in `/huge', you would use
1470`mem=mmaphuge:/huge/somefile'.
1471.RE
1472.TP
1473.BI iomem_align \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP mem_align" \fR=\fPint
1474This indicates the memory alignment of the I/O memory buffers. Note that
1475the given alignment is applied to the first I/O unit buffer, if using
1476\fBiodepth\fR the alignment of the following buffers are given by the
1477\fBbs\fR used. In other words, if using a \fBbs\fR that is a
1478multiple of the page sized in the system, all buffers will be aligned to
1479this value. If using a \fBbs\fR that is not page aligned, the alignment
1480of subsequent I/O memory buffers is the sum of the \fBiomem_align\fR and
1481\fBbs\fR used.
1482.TP
1483.BI hugepage\-size \fR=\fPint
1484Defines the size of a huge page. Must at least be equal to the system
1485setting, see `/proc/meminfo'. Defaults to 4MiB. Should probably
1486always be a multiple of megabytes, so using `hugepage\-size=Xm' is the
1487preferred way to set this to avoid setting a non\-pow\-2 bad value.
1488.TP
1489.BI lockmem \fR=\fPint
1490Pin the specified amount of memory with \fBmlock\fR\|(2). Can be used to
1491simulate a smaller amount of memory. The amount specified is per worker.
1492.SS "I/O size"
1493.TP
1494.BI size \fR=\fPint
1495The total size of file I/O for each thread of this job. Fio will run until
1496this many bytes has been transferred, unless runtime is limited by other options
1497(such as \fBruntime\fR, for instance, or increased/decreased by \fBio_size\fR).
1498Fio will divide this size between the available files determined by options
1499such as \fBnrfiles\fR, \fBfilename\fR, unless \fBfilesize\fR is
1500specified by the job. If the result of division happens to be 0, the size is
1501set to the physical size of the given files or devices if they exist.
1502If this option is not specified, fio will use the full size of the given
1503files or devices. If the files do not exist, size must be given. It is also
1504possible to give size as a percentage between 1 and 100. If `size=20%' is
1505given, fio will use 20% of the full size of the given files or devices.
1506Can be combined with \fBoffset\fR to constrain the start and end range
1507that I/O will be done within.
1508.TP
1509.BI io_size \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fB io_limit" \fR=\fPint
1510Normally fio operates within the region set by \fBsize\fR, which means
1511that the \fBsize\fR option sets both the region and size of I/O to be
1512performed. Sometimes that is not what you want. With this option, it is
1513possible to define just the amount of I/O that fio should do. For instance,
1514if \fBsize\fR is set to 20GiB and \fBio_size\fR is set to 5GiB, fio
1515will perform I/O within the first 20GiB but exit when 5GiB have been
1516done. The opposite is also possible \-\- if \fBsize\fR is set to 20GiB,
1517and \fBio_size\fR is set to 40GiB, then fio will do 40GiB of I/O within
1518the 0..20GiB region.
1519.TP
1520.BI filesize \fR=\fPirange(int)
1521Individual file sizes. May be a range, in which case fio will select sizes
1522for files at random within the given range and limited to \fBsize\fR in
1523total (if that is given). If not given, each created file is the same size.
1524This option overrides \fBsize\fR in terms of file size, which means
1525this value is used as a fixed size or possible range of each file.
1526.TP
1527.BI file_append \fR=\fPbool
1528Perform I/O after the end of the file. Normally fio will operate within the
1529size of a file. If this option is set, then fio will append to the file
1530instead. This has identical behavior to setting \fBoffset\fR to the size
1531of a file. This option is ignored on non\-regular files.
1532.TP
1533.BI fill_device \fR=\fPbool "\fR,\fB fill_fs" \fR=\fPbool
1534Sets size to something really large and waits for ENOSPC (no space left on
1535device) as the terminating condition. Only makes sense with sequential
1536write. For a read workload, the mount point will be filled first then I/O
1537started on the result. This option doesn't make sense if operating on a raw
1538device node, since the size of that is already known by the file system.
1539Additionally, writing beyond end\-of\-device will not return ENOSPC there.
1540.SS "I/O engine"
1541.TP
1542.BI ioengine \fR=\fPstr
1543Defines how the job issues I/O to the file. The following types are defined:
1544.RS
1545.RS
1546.TP
1547.B sync
1548Basic \fBread\fR\|(2) or \fBwrite\fR\|(2)
1549I/O. \fBlseek\fR\|(2) is used to position the I/O location.
1550See \fBfsync\fR and \fBfdatasync\fR for syncing write I/Os.
1551.TP
1552.B psync
1553Basic \fBpread\fR\|(2) or \fBpwrite\fR\|(2) I/O. Default on
1554all supported operating systems except for Windows.
1555.TP
1556.B vsync
1557Basic \fBreadv\fR\|(2) or \fBwritev\fR\|(2) I/O. Will emulate
1558queuing by coalescing adjacent I/Os into a single submission.
1559.TP
1560.B pvsync
1561Basic \fBpreadv\fR\|(2) or \fBpwritev\fR\|(2) I/O.
1562.TP
1563.B pvsync2
1564Basic \fBpreadv2\fR\|(2) or \fBpwritev2\fR\|(2) I/O.
1565.TP
1566.B libaio
1567Linux native asynchronous I/O. Note that Linux may only support
1568queued behavior with non\-buffered I/O (set `direct=1' or
1569`buffered=0').
1570This engine defines engine specific options.
1571.TP
1572.B posixaio
1573POSIX asynchronous I/O using \fBaio_read\fR\|(3) and
1574\fBaio_write\fR\|(3).
1575.TP
1576.B solarisaio
1577Solaris native asynchronous I/O.
1578.TP
1579.B windowsaio
1580Windows native asynchronous I/O. Default on Windows.
1581.TP
1582.B mmap
1583File is memory mapped with \fBmmap\fR\|(2) and data copied
1584to/from using \fBmemcpy\fR\|(3).
1585.TP
1586.B splice
1587\fBsplice\fR\|(2) is used to transfer the data and
1588\fBvmsplice\fR\|(2) to transfer data from user space to the
1589kernel.
1590.TP
1591.B sg
1592SCSI generic sg v3 I/O. May either be synchronous using the SG_IO
1593ioctl, or if the target is an sg character device we use
1594\fBread\fR\|(2) and \fBwrite\fR\|(2) for asynchronous
1595I/O. Requires \fBfilename\fR option to specify either block or
1596character devices. This engine supports trim operations. The
1597sg engine includes engine specific options.
1598.TP
1599.B null
1600Doesn't transfer any data, just pretends to. This is mainly used to
1601exercise fio itself and for debugging/testing purposes.
1602.TP
1603.B net
1604Transfer over the network to given `host:port'. Depending on the
1605\fBprotocol\fR used, the \fBhostname\fR, \fBport\fR,
1606\fBlisten\fR and \fBfilename\fR options are used to specify
1607what sort of connection to make, while the \fBprotocol\fR option
1608determines which protocol will be used. This engine defines engine
1609specific options.
1610.TP
1611.B netsplice
1612Like \fBnet\fR, but uses \fBsplice\fR\|(2) and
1613\fBvmsplice\fR\|(2) to map data and send/receive.
1614This engine defines engine specific options.
1615.TP
1616.B cpuio
1617Doesn't transfer any data, but burns CPU cycles according to the
1618\fBcpuload\fR and \fBcpuchunks\fR options. Setting
1619\fBcpuload\fR\=85 will cause that job to do nothing but burn 85%
1620of the CPU. In case of SMP machines, use `numjobs=<nr_of_cpu>'
1621to get desired CPU usage, as the cpuload only loads a
1622single CPU at the desired rate. A job never finishes unless there is
1623at least one non\-cpuio job.
1624.TP
1625.B guasi
1626The GUASI I/O engine is the Generic Userspace Asynchronous Syscall
1627Interface approach to async I/O. See \fIhttp://www.xmailserver.org/guasi\-lib.html\fR
1628for more info on GUASI.
1629.TP
1630.B rdma
1631The RDMA I/O engine supports both RDMA memory semantics
1632(RDMA_WRITE/RDMA_READ) and channel semantics (Send/Recv) for the
1633InfiniBand, RoCE and iWARP protocols. This engine defines engine
1634specific options.
1635.TP
1636.B falloc
1637I/O engine that does regular fallocate to simulate data transfer as
1638fio ioengine.
1639.RS
1640.P
1641.PD 0
1642DDIR_READ does fallocate(,mode = FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE,).
1643.P
1644DIR_WRITE does fallocate(,mode = 0).
1645.P
1646DDIR_TRIM does fallocate(,mode = FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE|FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE).
1647.PD
1648.RE
1649.TP
1650.B ftruncate
1651I/O engine that sends \fBftruncate\fR\|(2) operations in response
1652to write (DDIR_WRITE) events. Each ftruncate issued sets the file's
1653size to the current block offset. \fBblocksize\fR is ignored.
1654.TP
1655.B e4defrag
1656I/O engine that does regular EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT ioctls to simulate
1657defragment activity in request to DDIR_WRITE event.
1658.TP
1659.B rados
1660I/O engine supporting direct access to Ceph Reliable Autonomic Distributed
1661Object Store (RADOS) via librados. This ioengine defines engine specific
1662options.
1663.TP
1664.B rbd
1665I/O engine supporting direct access to Ceph Rados Block Devices
1666(RBD) via librbd without the need to use the kernel rbd driver. This
1667ioengine defines engine specific options.
1668.TP
1669.B http
1670I/O engine supporting GET/PUT requests over HTTP(S) with libcurl to
1671a WebDAV or S3 endpoint. This ioengine defines engine specific options.
1672
1673This engine only supports direct IO of iodepth=1; you need to scale this
1674via numjobs. blocksize defines the size of the objects to be created.
1675
1676TRIM is translated to object deletion.
1677.TP
1678.B gfapi
1679Using GlusterFS libgfapi sync interface to direct access to
1680GlusterFS volumes without having to go through FUSE. This ioengine
1681defines engine specific options.
1682.TP
1683.B gfapi_async
1684Using GlusterFS libgfapi async interface to direct access to
1685GlusterFS volumes without having to go through FUSE. This ioengine
1686defines engine specific options.
1687.TP
1688.B libhdfs
1689Read and write through Hadoop (HDFS). The \fBfilename\fR option
1690is used to specify host,port of the hdfs name\-node to connect. This
1691engine interprets offsets a little differently. In HDFS, files once
1692created cannot be modified so random writes are not possible. To
1693imitate this the libhdfs engine expects a bunch of small files to be
1694created over HDFS and will randomly pick a file from them
1695based on the offset generated by fio backend (see the example
1696job file to create such files, use `rw=write' option). Please
1697note, it may be necessary to set environment variables to work
1698with HDFS/libhdfs properly. Each job uses its own connection to
1699HDFS.
1700.TP
1701.B mtd
1702Read, write and erase an MTD character device (e.g.,
1703`/dev/mtd0'). Discards are treated as erases. Depending on the
1704underlying device type, the I/O may have to go in a certain pattern,
1705e.g., on NAND, writing sequentially to erase blocks and discarding
1706before overwriting. The \fBtrimwrite\fR mode works well for this
1707constraint.
1708.TP
1709.B pmemblk
1710Read and write using filesystem DAX to a file on a filesystem
1711mounted with DAX on a persistent memory device through the PMDK
1712libpmemblk library.
1713.TP
1714.B dev\-dax
1715Read and write using device DAX to a persistent memory device (e.g.,
1716/dev/dax0.0) through the PMDK libpmem library.
1717.TP
1718.B external
1719Prefix to specify loading an external I/O engine object file. Append
1720the engine filename, e.g. `ioengine=external:/tmp/foo.o' to load
1721ioengine `foo.o' in `/tmp'. The path can be either
1722absolute or relative. See `engines/skeleton_external.c' in the fio source for
1723details of writing an external I/O engine.
1724.TP
1725.B filecreate
1726Simply create the files and do no I/O to them. You still need to set
1727\fBfilesize\fR so that all the accounting still occurs, but no actual I/O will be
1728done other than creating the file.
1729.TP
1730.B libpmem
1731Read and write using mmap I/O to a file on a filesystem
1732mounted with DAX on a persistent memory device through the PMDK
1733libpmem library.
1734.TP
1735.B ime_psync
1736Synchronous read and write using DDN's Infinite Memory Engine (IME). This
1737engine is very basic and issues calls to IME whenever an IO is queued.
1738.TP
1739.B ime_psyncv
1740Synchronous read and write using DDN's Infinite Memory Engine (IME). This
1741engine uses iovecs and will try to stack as much IOs as possible (if the IOs
1742are "contiguous" and the IO depth is not exceeded) before issuing a call to IME.
1743.TP
1744.B ime_aio
1745Asynchronous read and write using DDN's Infinite Memory Engine (IME). This
1746engine will try to stack as much IOs as possible by creating requests for IME.
1747FIO will then decide when to commit these requests.
1748.SS "I/O engine specific parameters"
1749In addition, there are some parameters which are only valid when a specific
1750\fBioengine\fR is in use. These are used identically to normal parameters,
1751with the caveat that when used on the command line, they must come after the
1752\fBioengine\fR that defines them is selected.
1753.TP
1754.BI (libaio)userspace_reap
1755Normally, with the libaio engine in use, fio will use the
1756\fBio_getevents\fR\|(3) system call to reap newly returned events. With
1757this flag turned on, the AIO ring will be read directly from user\-space to
1758reap events. The reaping mode is only enabled when polling for a minimum of
17590 events (e.g. when `iodepth_batch_complete=0').
1760.TP
1761.BI (pvsync2)hipri
1762Set RWF_HIPRI on I/O, indicating to the kernel that it's of higher priority
1763than normal.
1764.TP
1765.BI (pvsync2)hipri_percentage
1766When hipri is set this determines the probability of a pvsync2 I/O being high
1767priority. The default is 100%.
1768.TP
1769.BI (cpuio)cpuload \fR=\fPint
1770Attempt to use the specified percentage of CPU cycles. This is a mandatory
1771option when using cpuio I/O engine.
1772.TP
1773.BI (cpuio)cpuchunks \fR=\fPint
1774Split the load into cycles of the given time. In microseconds.
1775.TP
1776.BI (cpuio)exit_on_io_done \fR=\fPbool
1777Detect when I/O threads are done, then exit.
1778.TP
1779.BI (libhdfs)namenode \fR=\fPstr
1780The hostname or IP address of a HDFS cluster namenode to contact.
1781.TP
1782.BI (libhdfs)port
1783The listening port of the HFDS cluster namenode.
1784.TP
1785.BI (netsplice,net)port
1786The TCP or UDP port to bind to or connect to. If this is used with
1787\fBnumjobs\fR to spawn multiple instances of the same job type, then
1788this will be the starting port number since fio will use a range of
1789ports.
1790.TP
1791.BI (rdma)port
1792The port to use for RDMA-CM communication. This should be the same
1793value on the client and the server side.
1794.TP
1795.BI (netsplice,net, rdma)hostname \fR=\fPstr
1796The hostname or IP address to use for TCP, UDP or RDMA-CM based I/O.
1797If the job is a TCP listener or UDP reader, the hostname is not used
1798and must be omitted unless it is a valid UDP multicast address.
1799.TP
1800.BI (netsplice,net)interface \fR=\fPstr
1801The IP address of the network interface used to send or receive UDP
1802multicast.
1803.TP
1804.BI (netsplice,net)ttl \fR=\fPint
1805Time\-to\-live value for outgoing UDP multicast packets. Default: 1.
1806.TP
1807.BI (netsplice,net)nodelay \fR=\fPbool
1808Set TCP_NODELAY on TCP connections.
1809.TP
1810.BI (netsplice,net)protocol \fR=\fPstr "\fR,\fP proto" \fR=\fPstr
1811The network protocol to use. Accepted values are:
1812.RS
1813.RS
1814.TP
1815.B tcp
1816Transmission control protocol.
1817.TP
1818.B tcpv6
1819Transmission control protocol V6.
1820.TP
1821.B udp
1822User datagram protocol.
1823.TP
1824.B udpv6
1825User datagram protocol V6.
1826.TP
1827.B unix
1828UNIX domain socket.
1829.RE
1830.P
1831When the protocol is TCP or UDP, the port must also be given, as well as the
1832hostname if the job is a TCP listener or UDP reader. For unix sockets, the
1833normal \fBfilename\fR option should be used and the port is invalid.
1834.RE
1835.TP
1836.BI (netsplice,net)listen
1837For TCP network connections, tell fio to listen for incoming connections
1838rather than initiating an outgoing connection. The \fBhostname\fR must
1839be omitted if this option is used.
1840.TP
1841.BI (netsplice,net)pingpong
1842Normally a network writer will just continue writing data, and a network
1843reader will just consume packages. If `pingpong=1' is set, a writer will
1844send its normal payload to the reader, then wait for the reader to send the
1845same payload back. This allows fio to measure network latencies. The
1846submission and completion latencies then measure local time spent sending or
1847receiving, and the completion latency measures how long it took for the
1848other end to receive and send back. For UDP multicast traffic
1849`pingpong=1' should only be set for a single reader when multiple readers
1850are listening to the same address.
1851.TP
1852.BI (netsplice,net)window_size \fR=\fPint
1853Set the desired socket buffer size for the connection.
1854.TP
1855.BI (netsplice,net)mss \fR=\fPint
1856Set the TCP maximum segment size (TCP_MAXSEG).
1857.TP
1858.BI (e4defrag)donorname \fR=\fPstr
1859File will be used as a block donor (swap extents between files).
1860.TP
1861.BI (e4defrag)inplace \fR=\fPint
1862Configure donor file blocks allocation strategy:
1863.RS
1864.RS
1865.TP
1866.B 0
1867Default. Preallocate donor's file on init.
1868.TP
1869.B 1
1870Allocate space immediately inside defragment event, and free right
1871after event.
1872.RE
1873.RE
1874.TP
1875.BI (rbd,rados)clustername \fR=\fPstr
1876Specifies the name of the Ceph cluster.
1877.TP
1878.BI (rbd)rbdname \fR=\fPstr
1879Specifies the name of the RBD.
1880.TP
1881.BI (rbd,rados)pool \fR=\fPstr
1882Specifies the name of the Ceph pool containing RBD or RADOS data.
1883.TP
1884.BI (rbd,rados)clientname \fR=\fPstr
1885Specifies the username (without the 'client.' prefix) used to access the
1886Ceph cluster. If the \fBclustername\fR is specified, the \fBclientname\fR shall be
1887the full *type.id* string. If no type. prefix is given, fio will add 'client.'
1888by default.
1889.TP
1890.BI (rbd,rados)busy_poll \fR=\fPbool
1891Poll store instead of waiting for completion. Usually this provides better
1892throughput at cost of higher(up to 100%) CPU utilization.
1893.TP
1894.BI (http)http_host \fR=\fPstr
1895Hostname to connect to. For S3, this could be the bucket name. Default
1896is \fBlocalhost\fR
1897.TP
1898.BI (http)http_user \fR=\fPstr
1899Username for HTTP authentication.
1900.TP
1901.BI (http)http_pass \fR=\fPstr
1902Password for HTTP authentication.
1903.TP
1904.BI (http)https \fR=\fPstr
1905Whether to use HTTPS instead of plain HTTP. \fRon\fP enables HTTPS;
1906\fRinsecure\fP will enable HTTPS, but disable SSL peer verification (use
1907with caution!). Default is \fBoff\fR.
1908.TP
1909.BI (http)http_mode \fR=\fPstr
1910Which HTTP access mode to use: webdav, swift, or s3. Default is
1911\fBwebdav\fR.
1912.TP
1913.BI (http)http_s3_region \fR=\fPstr
1914The S3 region/zone to include in the request. Default is \fBus-east-1\fR.
1915.TP
1916.BI (http)http_s3_key \fR=\fPstr
1917The S3 secret key.
1918.TP
1919.BI (http)http_s3_keyid \fR=\fPstr
1920The S3 key/access id.
1921.TP
1922.BI (http)http_swift_auth_token \fR=\fPstr
1923The Swift auth token. See the example configuration file on how to
1924retrieve this.
1925.TP
1926.BI (http)http_verbose \fR=\fPint
1927Enable verbose requests from libcurl. Useful for debugging. 1 turns on
1928verbose logging from libcurl, 2 additionally enables HTTP IO tracing.
1929Default is \fB0\fR
1930.TP
1931.BI (mtd)skip_bad \fR=\fPbool
1932Skip operations against known bad blocks.
1933.TP
1934.BI (libhdfs)hdfsdirectory
1935libhdfs will create chunk in this HDFS directory.
1936.TP
1937.BI (libhdfs)chunk_size
1938The size of the chunk to use for each file.
1939.TP
1940.BI (rdma)verb \fR=\fPstr
1941The RDMA verb to use on this side of the RDMA ioengine
1942connection. Valid values are write, read, send and recv. These
1943correspond to the equivalent RDMA verbs (e.g. write = rdma_write
1944etc.). Note that this only needs to be specified on the client side of
1945the connection. See the examples folder.
1946.TP
1947.BI (rdma)bindname \fR=\fPstr
1948The name to use to bind the local RDMA-CM connection to a local RDMA
1949device. This could be a hostname or an IPv4 or IPv6 address. On the
1950server side this will be passed into the rdma_bind_addr() function and
1951on the client site it will be used in the rdma_resolve_add()
1952function. This can be useful when multiple paths exist between the
1953client and the server or in certain loopback configurations.
1954.TP
1955.BI (sg)readfua \fR=\fPbool
1956With readfua option set to 1, read operations include the force
1957unit access (fua) flag. Default: 0.
1958.TP
1959.BI (sg)writefua \fR=\fPbool
1960With writefua option set to 1, write operations include the force
1961unit access (fua) flag. Default: 0.
1962.TP
1963.BI (sg)sg_write_mode \fR=\fPstr
1964Specify the type of write commands to issue. This option can take three
1965values:
1966.RS
1967.RS
1968.TP
1969.B write (default)
1970Write opcodes are issued as usual
1971.TP
1972.B verify
1973Issue WRITE AND VERIFY commands. The BYTCHK bit is set to 0. This
1974directs the device to carry out a medium verification with no data
1975comparison. The writefua option is ignored with this selection.
1976.TP
1977.B same
1978Issue WRITE SAME commands. This transfers a single block to the device
1979and writes this same block of data to a contiguous sequence of LBAs
1980beginning at the specified offset. fio's block size parameter
1981specifies the amount of data written with each command. However, the
1982amount of data actually transferred to the device is equal to the
1983device's block (sector) size. For a device with 512 byte sectors,
1984blocksize=8k will write 16 sectors with each command. fio will still
1985generate 8k of data for each command butonly the first 512 bytes will
1986be used and transferred to the device. The writefua option is ignored
1987with this selection.
1988
1989.SS "I/O depth"
1990.TP
1991.BI iodepth \fR=\fPint
1992Number of I/O units to keep in flight against the file. Note that
1993increasing \fBiodepth\fR beyond 1 will not affect synchronous ioengines (except
1994for small degrees when \fBverify_async\fR is in use). Even async
1995engines may impose OS restrictions causing the desired depth not to be
1996achieved. This may happen on Linux when using libaio and not setting
1997`direct=1', since buffered I/O is not async on that OS. Keep an
1998eye on the I/O depth distribution in the fio output to verify that the
1999achieved depth is as expected. Default: 1.
2000.TP
2001.BI iodepth_batch_submit \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP iodepth_batch" \fR=\fPint
2002This defines how many pieces of I/O to submit at once. It defaults to 1
2003which means that we submit each I/O as soon as it is available, but can be
2004raised to submit bigger batches of I/O at the time. If it is set to 0 the
2005\fBiodepth\fR value will be used.
2006.TP
2007.BI iodepth_batch_complete_min \fR=\fPint "\fR,\fP iodepth_batch_complete" \fR=\fPint
2008This defines how many pieces of I/O to retrieve at once. It defaults to 1
2009which means that we'll ask for a minimum of 1 I/O in the retrieval process
2010from the kernel. The I/O retrieval will go on until we hit the limit set by
2011\fBiodepth_low\fR. If this variable is set to 0, then fio will always
2012check for completed events before queuing more I/O. This helps reduce I/O
2013latency, at the cost of more retrieval system calls.
2014.TP
2015.BI iodepth_batch_complete_max \fR=\fPint
2016This defines maximum pieces of I/O to retrieve at once. This variable should
2017be used along with \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR=\fIint\fR variable,
2018specifying the range of min and max amount of I/O which should be
2019retrieved. By default it is equal to \fBiodepth_batch_complete_min\fR
2020value. Example #1:
2021.RS
2022.RS
2023.P
2024.PD 0
2025iodepth_batch_complete_min=1
2026.P
2027iodepth_batch_complete_max=<iodepth>
2028.PD
2029.RE
2030.P
2031which means that we will retrieve at least 1 I/O and up to the whole
2032submitted queue depth. If none of I/O has been completed yet, we will wait.
2033Example #2:
2034.RS
2035.P
2036.PD 0
2037iodepth_batch_complete_min=0
2038.P
2039iodepth_batch_complete_max=<iodepth>
2040.PD
2041.RE
2042.P
2043which means that we can retrieve up to the whole submitted queue depth, but
2044if none of I/O has been completed yet, we will NOT wait and immediately exit
2045the system call. In this example we simply do polling.
2046.RE
2047.TP
2048.BI iodepth_low \fR=\fPint
2049The low water mark indicating when to start filling the queue
2050again. Defaults to the same as \fBiodepth\fR, meaning that fio will
2051attempt to keep the queue full at all times. If \fBiodepth\fR is set to
2052e.g. 16 and \fBiodepth_low\fR is set to 4, then after fio has filled the queue of
205316 requests, it will let the depth drain down to 4 before starting to fill
2054it again.
2055.TP
2056.BI serialize_overlap \fR=\fPbool
2057Serialize in-flight I/Os that might otherwise cause or suffer from data races.
2058When two or more I/Os are submitted simultaneously, there is no guarantee that
2059the I/Os will be processed or completed in the submitted order. Further, if
2060two or more of those I/Os are writes, any overlapping region between them can
2061become indeterminate/undefined on certain storage. These issues can cause
2062verification to fail erratically when at least one of the racing I/Os is
2063changing data and the overlapping region has a non-zero size. Setting
2064\fBserialize_overlap\fR tells fio to avoid provoking this behavior by explicitly
2065serializing in-flight I/Os that have a non-zero overlap. Note that setting
2066this option can reduce both performance and the \fBiodepth\fR achieved.
2067Additionally this option does not work when \fBio_submit_mode\fR is set to
2068offload. Default: false.
2069.TP
2070.BI io_submit_mode \fR=\fPstr
2071This option controls how fio submits the I/O to the I/O engine. The default
2072is `inline', which means that the fio job threads submit and reap I/O
2073directly. If set to `offload', the job threads will offload I/O submission
2074to a dedicated pool of I/O threads. This requires some coordination and thus
2075has a bit of extra overhead, especially for lower queue depth I/O where it
2076can increase latencies. The benefit is that fio can manage submission rates
2077independently of the device completion rates. This avoids skewed latency
2078reporting if I/O gets backed up on the device side (the coordinated omission
2079problem).
2080.SS "I/O rate"
2081.TP
2082.BI thinktime \fR=\fPtime
2083Stall the job for the specified period of time after an I/O has completed before issuing the
2084next. May be used to simulate processing being done by an application.
2085When the unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in microseconds. See
2086\fBthinktime_blocks\fR and \fBthinktime_spin\fR.
2087.TP
2088.BI thinktime_spin \fR=\fPtime
2089Only valid if \fBthinktime\fR is set \- pretend to spend CPU time doing
2090something with the data received, before falling back to sleeping for the
2091rest of the period specified by \fBthinktime\fR. When the unit is
2092omitted, the value is interpreted in microseconds.
2093.TP
2094.BI thinktime_blocks \fR=\fPint
2095Only valid if \fBthinktime\fR is set \- control how many blocks to issue,
2096before waiting \fBthinktime\fR usecs. If not set, defaults to 1 which will make
2097fio wait \fBthinktime\fR usecs after every block. This effectively makes any
2098queue depth setting redundant, since no more than 1 I/O will be queued
2099before we have to complete it and do our \fBthinktime\fR. In other words, this
2100setting effectively caps the queue depth if the latter is larger.
2101.TP
2102.BI rate \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
2103Cap the bandwidth used by this job. The number is in bytes/sec, the normal
2104suffix rules apply. Comma\-separated values may be specified for reads,
2105writes, and trims as described in \fBblocksize\fR.
2106.RS
2107.P
2108For example, using `rate=1m,500k' would limit reads to 1MiB/sec and writes to
2109500KiB/sec. Capping only reads or writes can be done with `rate=,500k' or
2110`rate=500k,' where the former will only limit writes (to 500KiB/sec) and the
2111latter will only limit reads.
2112.RE
2113.TP
2114.BI rate_min \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
2115Tell fio to do whatever it can to maintain at least this bandwidth. Failing
2116to meet this requirement will cause the job to exit. Comma\-separated values
2117may be specified for reads, writes, and trims as described in
2118\fBblocksize\fR.
2119.TP
2120.BI rate_iops \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
2121Cap the bandwidth to this number of IOPS. Basically the same as
2122\fBrate\fR, just specified independently of bandwidth. If the job is
2123given a block size range instead of a fixed value, the smallest block size
2124is used as the metric. Comma\-separated values may be specified for reads,
2125writes, and trims as described in \fBblocksize\fR.
2126.TP
2127.BI rate_iops_min \fR=\fPint[,int][,int]
2128If fio doesn't meet this rate of I/O, it will cause the job to exit.
2129Comma\-separated values may be specified for reads, writes, and trims as
2130described in \fBblocksize\fR.
2131.TP
2132.BI rate_process \fR=\fPstr
2133This option controls how fio manages rated I/O submissions. The default is
2134`linear', which submits I/O in a linear fashion with fixed delays between
2135I/Os that gets adjusted based on I/O completion rates. If this is set to
2136`poisson', fio will submit I/O based on a more real world random request
2137flow, known as the Poisson process
2138(\fIhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_point_process\fR). The lambda will be
213910^6 / IOPS for the given workload.
2140.TP
2141.BI rate_ignore_thinktime \fR=\fPbool
2142By default, fio will attempt to catch up to the specified rate setting, if any
2143kind of thinktime setting was used. If this option is set, then fio will
2144ignore the thinktime and continue doing IO at the specified rate, instead of
2145entering a catch-up mode after thinktime is done.
2146.SS "I/O latency"
2147.TP
2148.BI latency_target \fR=\fPtime
2149If set, fio will attempt to find the max performance point that the given
2150workload will run at while maintaining a latency below this target. When
2151the unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in microseconds. See
2152\fBlatency_window\fR and \fBlatency_percentile\fR.
2153.TP
2154.BI latency_window \fR=\fPtime
2155Used with \fBlatency_target\fR to specify the sample window that the job
2156is run at varying queue depths to test the performance. When the unit is
2157omitted, the value is interpreted in microseconds.
2158.TP
2159.BI latency_percentile \fR=\fPfloat
2160The percentage of I/Os that must fall within the criteria specified by
2161\fBlatency_target\fR and \fBlatency_window\fR. If not set, this
2162defaults to 100.0, meaning that all I/Os must be equal or below to the value
2163set by \fBlatency_target\fR.
2164.TP
2165.BI max_latency \fR=\fPtime
2166If set, fio will exit the job with an ETIMEDOUT error if it exceeds this
2167maximum latency. When the unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in
2168microseconds.
2169.TP
2170.BI rate_cycle \fR=\fPint
2171Average bandwidth for \fBrate\fR and \fBrate_min\fR over this number
2172of milliseconds. Defaults to 1000.
2173.SS "I/O replay"
2174.TP
2175.BI write_iolog \fR=\fPstr
2176Write the issued I/O patterns to the specified file. See
2177\fBread_iolog\fR. Specify a separate file for each job, otherwise the
2178iologs will be interspersed and the file may be corrupt.
2179.TP
2180.BI read_iolog \fR=\fPstr
2181Open an iolog with the specified filename and replay the I/O patterns it
2182contains. This can be used to store a workload and replay it sometime
2183later. The iolog given may also be a blktrace binary file, which allows fio
2184to replay a workload captured by blktrace. See
2185\fBblktrace\fR\|(8) for how to capture such logging data. For blktrace
2186replay, the file needs to be turned into a blkparse binary data file first
2187(`blkparse <device> \-o /dev/null \-d file_for_fio.bin').
2188You can specify a number of files by separating the names with a ':' character.
2189See the \fBfilename\fR option for information on how to escape ':' and '\'
2190characters within the file names. These files will be sequentially assigned to
2191job clones created by \fBnumjobs\fR.
2192.TP
2193.BI read_iolog_chunked \fR=\fPbool
2194Determines how iolog is read. If false (default) entire \fBread_iolog\fR will
2195be read at once. If selected true, input from iolog will be read gradually.
2196Useful when iolog is very large, or it is generated.
2197.TP
2198.BI replay_no_stall \fR=\fPbool
2199When replaying I/O with \fBread_iolog\fR the default behavior is to
2200attempt to respect the timestamps within the log and replay them with the
2201appropriate delay between IOPS. By setting this variable fio will not
2202respect the timestamps and attempt to replay them as fast as possible while
2203still respecting ordering. The result is the same I/O pattern to a given
2204device, but different timings.
2205.TP
2206.BI replay_time_scale \fR=\fPint
2207When replaying I/O with \fBread_iolog\fR, fio will honor the original timing
2208in the trace. With this option, it's possible to scale the time. It's a
2209percentage option, if set to 50 it means run at 50% the original IO rate in
2210the trace. If set to 200, run at twice the original IO rate. Defaults to 100.
2211.TP
2212.BI replay_redirect \fR=\fPstr
2213While replaying I/O patterns using \fBread_iolog\fR the default behavior
2214is to replay the IOPS onto the major/minor device that each IOP was recorded
2215from. This is sometimes undesirable because on a different machine those
2216major/minor numbers can map to a different device. Changing hardware on the
2217same system can also result in a different major/minor mapping.
2218\fBreplay_redirect\fR causes all I/Os to be replayed onto the single specified
2219device regardless of the device it was recorded
2220from. i.e. `replay_redirect=/dev/sdc' would cause all I/O
2221in the blktrace or iolog to be replayed onto `/dev/sdc'. This means
2222multiple devices will be replayed onto a single device, if the trace
2223contains multiple devices. If you want multiple devices to be replayed
2224concurrently to multiple redirected devices you must blkparse your trace
2225into separate traces and replay them with independent fio invocations.
2226Unfortunately this also breaks the strict time ordering between multiple
2227device accesses.
2228.TP
2229.BI replay_align \fR=\fPint
2230Force alignment of I/O offsets and lengths in a trace to this power of 2
2231value.
2232.TP
2233.BI replay_scale \fR=\fPint
2234Scale sector offsets down by this factor when replaying traces.
2235.SS "Threads, processes and job synchronization"
2236.TP
2237.BI replay_skip \fR=\fPstr
2238Sometimes it's useful to skip certain IO types in a replay trace. This could
2239be, for instance, eliminating the writes in the trace. Or not replaying the
2240trims/discards, if you are redirecting to a device that doesn't support them.
2241This option takes a comma separated list of read, write, trim, sync.
2242.TP
2243.BI thread
2244Fio defaults to creating jobs by using fork, however if this option is
2245given, fio will create jobs by using POSIX Threads' function
2246\fBpthread_create\fR\|(3) to create threads instead.
2247.TP
2248.BI wait_for \fR=\fPstr
2249If set, the current job won't be started until all workers of the specified
2250waitee job are done.
2251.\" ignore blank line here from HOWTO as it looks normal without it
2252\fBwait_for\fR operates on the job name basis, so there are a few
2253limitations. First, the waitee must be defined prior to the waiter job
2254(meaning no forward references). Second, if a job is being referenced as a
2255waitee, it must have a unique name (no duplicate waitees).
2256.TP
2257.BI nice \fR=\fPint
2258Run the job with the given nice value. See man \fBnice\fR\|(2).
2259.\" ignore blank line here from HOWTO as it looks normal without it
2260On Windows, values less than \-15 set the process class to "High"; \-1 through
2261\-15 set "Above Normal"; 1 through 15 "Below Normal"; and above 15 "Idle"
2262priority class.
2263.TP
2264.BI prio \fR=\fPint
2265Set the I/O priority value of this job. Linux limits us to a positive value
2266between 0 and 7, with 0 being the highest. See man
2267\fBionice\fR\|(1). Refer to an appropriate manpage for other operating
2268systems since meaning of priority may differ.
2269.TP
2270.BI prioclass \fR=\fPint
2271Set the I/O priority class. See man \fBionice\fR\|(1).
2272.TP
2273.BI cpus_allowed \fR=\fPstr
2274Controls the same options as \fBcpumask\fR, but accepts a textual
2275specification of the permitted CPUs instead and CPUs are indexed from 0. So
2276to use CPUs 0 and 5 you would specify `cpus_allowed=0,5'. This option also
2277allows a range of CPUs to be specified \-\- say you wanted a binding to CPUs
22780, 5, and 8 to 15, you would set `cpus_allowed=0,5,8\-15'.
2279.RS
2280.P
2281On Windows, when `cpus_allowed' is unset only CPUs from fio's current
2282processor group will be used and affinity settings are inherited from the
2283system. An fio build configured to target Windows 7 makes options that set
2284CPUs processor group aware and values will set both the processor group
2285and a CPU from within that group. For example, on a system where processor
2286group 0 has 40 CPUs and processor group 1 has 32 CPUs, `cpus_allowed'
2287values between 0 and 39 will bind CPUs from processor group 0 and
2288`cpus_allowed' values between 40 and 71 will bind CPUs from processor
2289group 1. When using `cpus_allowed_policy=shared' all CPUs specified by a
2290single `cpus_allowed' option must be from the same processor group. For
2291Windows fio builds not built for Windows 7, CPUs will only be selected from
2292(and be relative to) whatever processor group fio happens to be running in
2293and CPUs from other processor groups cannot be used.
2294.RE
2295.TP
2296.BI cpus_allowed_policy \fR=\fPstr
2297Set the policy of how fio distributes the CPUs specified by
2298\fBcpus_allowed\fR or \fBcpumask\fR. Two policies are supported:
2299.RS
2300.RS
2301.TP
2302.B shared
2303All jobs will share the CPU set specified.
2304.TP
2305.B split
2306Each job will get a unique CPU from the CPU set.
2307.RE
2308.P
2309\fBshared\fR is the default behavior, if the option isn't specified. If
2310\fBsplit\fR is specified, then fio will will assign one cpu per job. If not
2311enough CPUs are given for the jobs listed, then fio will roundrobin the CPUs
2312in the set.
2313.RE
2314.TP
2315.BI cpumask \fR=\fPint
2316Set the CPU affinity of this job. The parameter given is a bit mask of
2317allowed CPUs the job may run on. So if you want the allowed CPUs to be 1
2318and 5, you would pass the decimal value of (1 << 1 | 1 << 5), or 34. See man
2319\fBsched_setaffinity\fR\|(2). This may not work on all supported
2320operating systems or kernel versions. This option doesn't work well for a
2321higher CPU count than what you can store in an integer mask, so it can only
2322control cpus 1\-32. For boxes with larger CPU counts, use
2323\fBcpus_allowed\fR.
2324.TP
2325.BI numa_cpu_nodes \fR=\fPstr
2326Set this job running on specified NUMA nodes' CPUs. The arguments allow
2327comma delimited list of cpu numbers, A\-B ranges, or `all'. Note, to enable
2328NUMA options support, fio must be built on a system with libnuma\-dev(el)
2329installed.
2330.TP
2331.BI numa_mem_policy \fR=\fPstr
2332Set this job's memory policy and corresponding NUMA nodes. Format of the
2333arguments:
2334.RS
2335.RS
2336.P
2337<mode>[:<nodelist>]
2338.RE
2339.P
2340`mode' is one of the following memory policies: `default', `prefer',
2341`bind', `interleave' or `local'. For `default' and `local' memory
2342policies, no node needs to be specified. For `prefer', only one node is
2343allowed. For `bind' and `interleave' the `nodelist' may be as
2344follows: a comma delimited list of numbers, A\-B ranges, or `all'.
2345.RE
2346.TP
2347.BI cgroup \fR=\fPstr
2348Add job to this control group. If it doesn't exist, it will be created. The
2349system must have a mounted cgroup blkio mount point for this to work. If
2350your system doesn't have it mounted, you can do so with:
2351.RS
2352.RS
2353.P
2354# mount \-t cgroup \-o blkio none /cgroup
2355.RE
2356.RE
2357.TP
2358.BI cgroup_weight \fR=\fPint
2359Set the weight of the cgroup to this value. See the documentation that comes
2360with the kernel, allowed values are in the range of 100..1000.
2361.TP
2362.BI cgroup_nodelete \fR=\fPbool
2363Normally fio will delete the cgroups it has created after the job
2364completion. To override this behavior and to leave cgroups around after the
2365job completion, set `cgroup_nodelete=1'. This can be useful if one wants
2366to inspect various cgroup files after job completion. Default: false.
2367.TP
2368.BI flow_id \fR=\fPint
2369The ID of the flow. If not specified, it defaults to being a global
2370flow. See \fBflow\fR.
2371.TP
2372.BI flow \fR=\fPint
2373Weight in token\-based flow control. If this value is used, then there is
2374a 'flow counter' which is used to regulate the proportion of activity between
2375two or more jobs. Fio attempts to keep this flow counter near zero. The
2376\fBflow\fR parameter stands for how much should be added or subtracted to the
2377flow counter on each iteration of the main I/O loop. That is, if one job has
2378`flow=8' and another job has `flow=\-1', then there will be a roughly 1:8
2379ratio in how much one runs vs the other.
2380.TP
2381.BI flow_watermark \fR=\fPint
2382The maximum value that the absolute value of the flow counter is allowed to
2383reach before the job must wait for a lower value of the counter.
2384.TP
2385.BI flow_sleep \fR=\fPint
2386The period of time, in microseconds, to wait after the flow watermark has
2387been exceeded before retrying operations.
2388.TP
2389.BI stonewall "\fR,\fB wait_for_previous"
2390Wait for preceding jobs in the job file to exit, before starting this
2391one. Can be used to insert serialization points in the job file. A stone
2392wall also implies starting a new reporting group, see
2393\fBgroup_reporting\fR.
2394.TP
2395.BI exitall
2396By default, fio will continue running all other jobs when one job finishes
2397but sometimes this is not the desired action. Setting \fBexitall\fR will
2398instead make fio terminate all other jobs when one job finishes.
2399.TP
2400.BI exec_prerun \fR=\fPstr
2401Before running this job, issue the command specified through
2402\fBsystem\fR\|(3). Output is redirected in a file called `jobname.prerun.txt'.
2403.TP
2404.BI exec_postrun \fR=\fPstr
2405After the job completes, issue the command specified though
2406\fBsystem\fR\|(3). Output is redirected in a file called `jobname.postrun.txt'.
2407.TP
2408.BI uid \fR=\fPint
2409Instead of running as the invoking user, set the user ID to this value
2410before the thread/process does any work.
2411.TP
2412.BI gid \fR=\fPint
2413Set group ID, see \fBuid\fR.
2414.SS "Verification"
2415.TP
2416.BI verify_only
2417Do not perform specified workload, only verify data still matches previous
2418invocation of this workload. This option allows one to check data multiple
2419times at a later date without overwriting it. This option makes sense only
2420for workloads that write data, and does not support workloads with the
2421\fBtime_based\fR option set.
2422.TP
2423.BI do_verify \fR=\fPbool
2424Run the verify phase after a write phase. Only valid if \fBverify\fR is
2425set. Default: true.
2426.TP
2427.BI verify \fR=\fPstr
2428If writing to a file, fio can verify the file contents after each iteration
2429of the job. Each verification method also implies verification of special
2430header, which is written to the beginning of each block. This header also
2431includes meta information, like offset of the block, block number, timestamp
2432when block was written, etc. \fBverify\fR can be combined with
2433\fBverify_pattern\fR option. The allowed values are:
2434.RS
2435.RS
2436.TP
2437.B md5
2438Use an md5 sum of the data area and store it in the header of
2439each block.
2440.TP
2441.B crc64
2442Use an experimental crc64 sum of the data area and store it in the
2443header of each block.
2444.TP
2445.B crc32c
2446Use a crc32c sum of the data area and store it in the header of
2447each block. This will automatically use hardware acceleration
2448(e.g. SSE4.2 on an x86 or CRC crypto extensions on ARM64) but will
2449fall back to software crc32c if none is found. Generally the
2450fastest checksum fio supports when hardware accelerated.
2451.TP
2452.B crc32c\-intel
2453Synonym for crc32c.
2454.TP
2455.B crc32
2456Use a crc32 sum of the data area and store it in the header of each
2457block.
2458.TP
2459.B crc16
2460Use a crc16 sum of the data area and store it in the header of each
2461block.
2462.TP
2463.B crc7
2464Use a crc7 sum of the data area and store it in the header of each
2465block.
2466.TP
2467.B xxhash
2468Use xxhash as the checksum function. Generally the fastest software
2469checksum that fio supports.
2470.TP
2471.B sha512
2472Use sha512 as the checksum function.
2473.TP
2474.B sha256
2475Use sha256 as the checksum function.
2476.TP
2477.B sha1
2478Use optimized sha1 as the checksum function.
2479.TP
2480.B sha3\-224
2481Use optimized sha3\-224 as the checksum function.
2482.TP
2483.B sha3\-256
2484Use optimized sha3\-256 as the checksum function.
2485.TP
2486.B sha3\-384
2487Use optimized sha3\-384 as the checksum function.
2488.TP
2489.B sha3\-512
2490Use optimized sha3\-512 as the checksum function.
2491.TP
2492.B meta
2493This option is deprecated, since now meta information is included in
2494generic verification header and meta verification happens by
2495default. For detailed information see the description of the
2496\fBverify\fR setting. This option is kept because of
2497compatibility's sake with old configurations. Do not use it.
2498.TP
2499.B pattern
2500Verify a strict pattern. Normally fio includes a header with some
2501basic information and checksumming, but if this option is set, only
2502the specific pattern set with \fBverify_pattern\fR is verified.
2503.TP
2504.B null
2505Only pretend to verify. Useful for testing internals with
2506`ioengine=null', not for much else.
2507.RE
2508.P
2509This option can be used for repeated burn\-in tests of a system to make sure
2510that the written data is also correctly read back. If the data direction
2511given is a read or random read, fio will assume that it should verify a
2512previously written file. If the data direction includes any form of write,
2513the verify will be of the newly written data.
2514.P
2515To avoid false verification errors, do not use the norandommap option when
2516verifying data with async I/O engines and I/O depths > 1. Or use the
2517norandommap and the lfsr random generator together to avoid writing to the
2518same offset with muliple outstanding I/Os.
2519.RE
2520.TP
2521.BI verify_offset \fR=\fPint
2522Swap the verification header with data somewhere else in the block before
2523writing. It is swapped back before verifying.
2524.TP
2525.BI verify_interval \fR=\fPint
2526Write the verification header at a finer granularity than the
2527\fBblocksize\fR. It will be written for chunks the size of
2528\fBverify_interval\fR. \fBblocksize\fR should divide this evenly.
2529.TP
2530.BI verify_pattern \fR=\fPstr
2531If set, fio will fill the I/O buffers with this pattern. Fio defaults to
2532filling with totally random bytes, but sometimes it's interesting to fill
2533with a known pattern for I/O verification purposes. Depending on the width
2534of the pattern, fio will fill 1/2/3/4 bytes of the buffer at the time (it can
2535be either a decimal or a hex number). The \fBverify_pattern\fR if larger than
2536a 32\-bit quantity has to be a hex number that starts with either "0x" or
2537"0X". Use with \fBverify\fR. Also, \fBverify_pattern\fR supports %o
2538format, which means that for each block offset will be written and then
2539verified back, e.g.:
2540.RS
2541.RS
2542.P
2543verify_pattern=%o
2544.RE
2545.P
2546Or use combination of everything:
2547.RS
2548.P
2549verify_pattern=0xff%o"abcd"\-12
2550.RE
2551.RE
2552.TP
2553.BI verify_fatal \fR=\fPbool
2554Normally fio will keep checking the entire contents before quitting on a
2555block verification failure. If this option is set, fio will exit the job on
2556the first observed failure. Default: false.
2557.TP
2558.BI verify_dump \fR=\fPbool
2559If set, dump the contents of both the original data block and the data block
2560we read off disk to files. This allows later analysis to inspect just what
2561kind of data corruption occurred. Off by default.
2562.TP
2563.BI verify_async \fR=\fPint
2564Fio will normally verify I/O inline from the submitting thread. This option
2565takes an integer describing how many async offload threads to create for I/O
2566verification instead, causing fio to offload the duty of verifying I/O
2567contents to one or more separate threads. If using this offload option, even
2568sync I/O engines can benefit from using an \fBiodepth\fR setting higher
2569than 1, as it allows them to have I/O in flight while verifies are running.
2570Defaults to 0 async threads, i.e. verification is not asynchronous.
2571.TP
2572.BI verify_async_cpus \fR=\fPstr
2573Tell fio to set the given CPU affinity on the async I/O verification
2574threads. See \fBcpus_allowed\fR for the format used.
2575.TP
2576.BI verify_backlog \fR=\fPint
2577Fio will normally verify the written contents of a job that utilizes verify
2578once that job has completed. In other words, everything is written then
2579everything is read back and verified. You may want to verify continually
2580instead for a variety of reasons. Fio stores the meta data associated with
2581an I/O block in memory, so for large verify workloads, quite a bit of memory
2582would be used up holding this meta data. If this option is enabled, fio will
2583write only N blocks before verifying these blocks.
2584.TP
2585.BI verify_backlog_batch \fR=\fPint
2586Control how many blocks fio will verify if \fBverify_backlog\fR is
2587set. If not set, will default to the value of \fBverify_backlog\fR
2588(meaning the entire queue is read back and verified). If
2589\fBverify_backlog_batch\fR is less than \fBverify_backlog\fR then not all
2590blocks will be verified, if \fBverify_backlog_batch\fR is larger than
2591\fBverify_backlog\fR, some blocks will be verified more than once.
2592.TP
2593.BI verify_state_save \fR=\fPbool
2594When a job exits during the write phase of a verify workload, save its
2595current state. This allows fio to replay up until that point, if the verify
2596state is loaded for the verify read phase. The format of the filename is,
2597roughly:
2598.RS
2599.RS
2600.P
2601<type>\-<jobname>\-<jobindex>\-verify.state.
2602.RE
2603.P
2604<type> is "local" for a local run, "sock" for a client/server socket
2605connection, and "ip" (192.168.0.1, for instance) for a networked
2606client/server connection. Defaults to true.
2607.RE
2608.TP
2609.BI verify_state_load \fR=\fPbool
2610If a verify termination trigger was used, fio stores the current write state
2611of each thread. This can be used at verification time so that fio knows how
2612far it should verify. Without this information, fio will run a full
2613verification pass, according to the settings in the job file used. Default
2614false.
2615.TP
2616.BI trim_percentage \fR=\fPint
2617Number of verify blocks to discard/trim.
2618.TP
2619.BI trim_verify_zero \fR=\fPbool
2620Verify that trim/discarded blocks are returned as zeros.
2621.TP
2622.BI trim_backlog \fR=\fPint
2623Verify that trim/discarded blocks are returned as zeros.
2624.TP
2625.BI trim_backlog_batch \fR=\fPint
2626Trim this number of I/O blocks.
2627.TP
2628.BI experimental_verify \fR=\fPbool
2629Enable experimental verification.
2630.SS "Steady state"
2631.TP
2632.BI steadystate \fR=\fPstr:float "\fR,\fP ss" \fR=\fPstr:float
2633Define the criterion and limit for assessing steady state performance. The
2634first parameter designates the criterion whereas the second parameter sets
2635the threshold. When the criterion falls below the threshold for the
2636specified duration, the job will stop. For example, `iops_slope:0.1%' will
2637direct fio to terminate the job when the least squares regression slope
2638falls below 0.1% of the mean IOPS. If \fBgroup_reporting\fR is enabled
2639this will apply to all jobs in the group. Below is the list of available
2640steady state assessment criteria. All assessments are carried out using only
2641data from the rolling collection window. Threshold limits can be expressed
2642as a fixed value or as a percentage of the mean in the collection window.
2643.RS
2644.RS
2645.TP
2646.B iops
2647Collect IOPS data. Stop the job if all individual IOPS measurements
2648are within the specified limit of the mean IOPS (e.g., `iops:2'
2649means that all individual IOPS values must be within 2 of the mean,
2650whereas `iops:0.2%' means that all individual IOPS values must be
2651within 0.2% of the mean IOPS to terminate the job).
2652.TP
2653.B iops_slope
2654Collect IOPS data and calculate the least squares regression
2655slope. Stop the job if the slope falls below the specified limit.
2656.TP
2657.B bw
2658Collect bandwidth data. Stop the job if all individual bandwidth
2659measurements are within the specified limit of the mean bandwidth.
2660.TP
2661.B bw_slope
2662Collect bandwidth data and calculate the least squares regression
2663slope. Stop the job if the slope falls below the specified limit.
2664.RE
2665.RE
2666.TP
2667.BI steadystate_duration \fR=\fPtime "\fR,\fP ss_dur" \fR=\fPtime
2668A rolling window of this duration will be used to judge whether steady state
2669has been reached. Data will be collected once per second. The default is 0
2670which disables steady state detection. When the unit is omitted, the
2671value is interpreted in seconds.
2672.TP
2673.BI steadystate_ramp_time \fR=\fPtime "\fR,\fP ss_ramp" \fR=\fPtime
2674Allow the job to run for the specified duration before beginning data
2675collection for checking the steady state job termination criterion. The
2676default is 0. When the unit is omitted, the value is interpreted in seconds.
2677.SS "Measurements and reporting"
2678.TP
2679.BI per_job_logs \fR=\fPbool
2680If set, this generates bw/clat/iops log with per file private filenames. If
2681not set, jobs with identical names will share the log filename. Default:
2682true.
2683.TP
2684.BI group_reporting
2685It may sometimes be interesting to display statistics for groups of jobs as
2686a whole instead of for each individual job. This is especially true if
2687\fBnumjobs\fR is used; looking at individual thread/process output
2688quickly becomes unwieldy. To see the final report per\-group instead of
2689per\-job, use \fBgroup_reporting\fR. Jobs in a file will be part of the
2690same reporting group, unless if separated by a \fBstonewall\fR, or by
2691using \fBnew_group\fR.
2692.TP
2693.BI new_group
2694Start a new reporting group. See: \fBgroup_reporting\fR. If not given,
2695all jobs in a file will be part of the same reporting group, unless
2696separated by a \fBstonewall\fR.
2697.TP
2698.BI stats \fR=\fPbool
2699By default, fio collects and shows final output results for all jobs
2700that run. If this option is set to 0, then fio will ignore it in
2701the final stat output.
2702.TP
2703.BI write_bw_log \fR=\fPstr
2704If given, write a bandwidth log for this job. Can be used to store data of
2705the bandwidth of the jobs in their lifetime.
2706.RS
2707.P
2708If no str argument is given, the default filename of
2709`jobname_type.x.log' is used. Even when the argument is given, fio
2710will still append the type of log. So if one specifies:
2711.RS
2712.P
2713write_bw_log=foo
2714.RE
2715.P
2716The actual log name will be `foo_bw.x.log' where `x' is the index
2717of the job (1..N, where N is the number of jobs). If
2718\fBper_job_logs\fR is false, then the filename will not include the
2719`.x` job index.
2720.P
2721The included \fBfio_generate_plots\fR script uses gnuplot to turn these
2722text files into nice graphs. See the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section for how data is
2723structured within the file.
2724.RE
2725.TP
2726.BI write_lat_log \fR=\fPstr
2727Same as \fBwrite_bw_log\fR, except this option creates I/O
2728submission (e.g., `name_slat.x.log'), completion (e.g.,
2729`name_clat.x.log'), and total (e.g., `name_lat.x.log') latency
2730files instead. See \fBwrite_bw_log\fR for details about the
2731filename format and the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section for how data is structured
2732within the files.
2733.TP
2734.BI write_hist_log \fR=\fPstr
2735Same as \fBwrite_bw_log\fR but writes an I/O completion latency
2736histogram file (e.g., `name_hist.x.log') instead. Note that this
2737file will be empty unless \fBlog_hist_msec\fR has also been set.
2738See \fBwrite_bw_log\fR for details about the filename format and
2739the \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section for how data is structured
2740within the file.
2741.TP
2742.BI write_iops_log \fR=\fPstr
2743Same as \fBwrite_bw_log\fR, but writes an IOPS file (e.g.
2744`name_iops.x.log`) instead. Because fio defaults to individual
2745I/O logging, the value entry in the IOPS log will be 1 unless windowed
2746logging (see \fBlog_avg_msec\fR) has been enabled. See
2747\fBwrite_bw_log\fR for details about the filename format and \fBLOG
2748FILE FORMATS\fR for how data is structured within the file.
2749.TP
2750.BI log_avg_msec \fR=\fPint
2751By default, fio will log an entry in the iops, latency, or bw log for every
2752I/O that completes. When writing to the disk log, that can quickly grow to a
2753very large size. Setting this option makes fio average the each log entry
2754over the specified period of time, reducing the resolution of the log. See
2755\fBlog_max_value\fR as well. Defaults to 0, logging all entries.
2756Also see \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section.
2757.TP
2758.BI log_hist_msec \fR=\fPint
2759Same as \fBlog_avg_msec\fR, but logs entries for completion latency
2760histograms. Computing latency percentiles from averages of intervals using
2761\fBlog_avg_msec\fR is inaccurate. Setting this option makes fio log
2762histogram entries over the specified period of time, reducing log sizes for
2763high IOPS devices while retaining percentile accuracy. See
2764\fBlog_hist_coarseness\fR and \fBwrite_hist_log\fR as well.
2765Defaults to 0, meaning histogram logging is disabled.
2766.TP
2767.BI log_hist_coarseness \fR=\fPint
2768Integer ranging from 0 to 6, defining the coarseness of the resolution of
2769the histogram logs enabled with \fBlog_hist_msec\fR. For each increment
2770in coarseness, fio outputs half as many bins. Defaults to 0, for which
2771histogram logs contain 1216 latency bins. See \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section.
2772.TP
2773.BI log_max_value \fR=\fPbool
2774If \fBlog_avg_msec\fR is set, fio logs the average over that window. If
2775you instead want to log the maximum value, set this option to 1. Defaults to
27760, meaning that averaged values are logged.
2777.TP
2778.BI log_offset \fR=\fPbool
2779If this is set, the iolog options will include the byte offset for the I/O
2780entry as well as the other data values. Defaults to 0 meaning that
2781offsets are not present in logs. Also see \fBLOG FILE FORMATS\fR section.
2782.TP
2783.BI log_compression \fR=\fPint
2784If this is set, fio will compress the I/O logs as it goes, to keep the
2785memory footprint lower. When a log reaches the specified size, that chunk is
2786removed and compressed in the background. Given that I/O logs are fairly
2787highly compressible, this yields a nice memory savings for longer runs. The
2788downside is that the compression will consume some background CPU cycles, so
2789it may impact the run. This, however, is also true if the logging ends up
2790consuming most of the system memory. So pick your poison. The I/O logs are
2791saved normally at the end of a run, by decompressing the chunks and storing
2792them in the specified log file. This feature depends on the availability of
2793zlib.
2794.TP
2795.BI log_compression_cpus \fR=\fPstr
2796Define the set of CPUs that are allowed to handle online log compression for
2797the I/O jobs. This can provide better isolation between performance
2798sensitive jobs, and background compression work. See \fBcpus_allowed\fR for
2799the format used.
2800.TP
2801.BI log_store_compressed \fR=\fPbool
2802If set, fio will store the log files in a compressed format. They can be
2803decompressed with fio, using the \fB\-\-inflate\-log\fR command line
2804parameter. The files will be stored with a `.fz' suffix.
2805.TP
2806.BI log_unix_epoch \fR=\fPbool
2807If set, fio will log Unix timestamps to the log files produced by enabling
2808write_type_log for each log type, instead of the default zero\-based
2809timestamps.
2810.TP
2811.BI block_error_percentiles \fR=\fPbool
2812If set, record errors in trim block\-sized units from writes and trims and
2813output a histogram of how many trims it took to get to errors, and what kind
2814of error was encountered.
2815.TP
2816.BI bwavgtime \fR=\fPint
2817Average the calculated bandwidth over the given time. Value is specified in
2818milliseconds. If the job also does bandwidth logging through
2819\fBwrite_bw_log\fR, then the minimum of this option and
2820\fBlog_avg_msec\fR will be used. Default: 500ms.
2821.TP
2822.BI iopsavgtime \fR=\fPint
2823Average the calculated IOPS over the given time. Value is specified in
2824milliseconds. If the job also does IOPS logging through
2825\fBwrite_iops_log\fR, then the minimum of this option and
2826\fBlog_avg_msec\fR will be used. Default: 500ms.
2827.TP
2828.BI disk_util \fR=\fPbool
2829Generate disk utilization statistics, if the platform supports it.
2830Default: true.
2831.TP
2832.BI disable_lat \fR=\fPbool
2833Disable measurements of total latency numbers. Useful only for cutting back
2834the number of calls to \fBgettimeofday\fR\|(2), as that does impact
2835performance at really high IOPS rates. Note that to really get rid of a
2836large amount of these calls, this option must be used with
2837\fBdisable_slat\fR and \fBdisable_bw_measurement\fR as well.
2838.TP
2839.BI disable_clat \fR=\fPbool
2840Disable measurements of completion latency numbers. See
2841\fBdisable_lat\fR.
2842.TP
2843.BI disable_slat \fR=\fPbool
2844Disable measurements of submission latency numbers. See
2845\fBdisable_lat\fR.
2846.TP
2847.BI disable_bw_measurement \fR=\fPbool "\fR,\fP disable_bw" \fR=\fPbool
2848Disable measurements of throughput/bandwidth numbers. See
2849\fBdisable_lat\fR.
2850.TP
2851.BI clat_percentiles \fR=\fPbool
2852Enable the reporting of percentiles of completion latencies. This option is
2853mutually exclusive with \fBlat_percentiles\fR.
2854.TP
2855.BI lat_percentiles \fR=\fPbool
2856Enable the reporting of percentiles of I/O latencies. This is similar to
2857\fBclat_percentiles\fR, except that this includes the submission latency.
2858This option is mutually exclusive with \fBclat_percentiles\fR.
2859.TP
2860.BI percentile_list \fR=\fPfloat_list
2861Overwrite the default list of percentiles for completion latencies and the
2862block error histogram. Each number is a floating number in the range
2863(0,100], and the maximum length of the list is 20. Use ':' to separate the
2864numbers, and list the numbers in ascending order. For example,
2865`\-\-percentile_list=99.5:99.9' will cause fio to report the values of
2866completion latency below which 99.5% and 99.9% of the observed latencies
2867fell, respectively.
2868.TP
2869.BI significant_figures \fR=\fPint
2870If using \fB\-\-output\-format\fR of `normal', set the significant figures
2871to this value. Higher values will yield more precise IOPS and throughput
2872units, while lower values will round. Requires a minimum value of 1 and a
2873maximum value of 10. Defaults to 4.
2874.SS "Error handling"
2875.TP
2876.BI exitall_on_error
2877When one job finishes in error, terminate the rest. The default is to wait
2878for each job to finish.
2879.TP
2880.BI continue_on_error \fR=\fPstr
2881Normally fio will exit the job on the first observed failure. If this option
2882is set, fio will continue the job when there is a 'non\-fatal error' (EIO or
2883EILSEQ) until the runtime is exceeded or the I/O size specified is
2884completed. If this option is used, there are two more stats that are
2885appended, the total error count and the first error. The error field given
2886in the stats is the first error that was hit during the run.
2887The allowed values are:
2888.RS
2889.RS
2890.TP
2891.B none
2892Exit on any I/O or verify errors.
2893.TP
2894.B read
2895Continue on read errors, exit on all others.
2896.TP
2897.B write
2898Continue on write errors, exit on all others.
2899.TP
2900.B io
2901Continue on any I/O error, exit on all others.
2902.TP
2903.B verify
2904Continue on verify errors, exit on all others.
2905.TP
2906.B all
2907Continue on all errors.
2908.TP
2909.B 0
2910Backward\-compatible alias for 'none'.
2911.TP
2912.B 1
2913Backward\-compatible alias for 'all'.
2914.RE
2915.RE
2916.TP
2917.BI ignore_error \fR=\fPstr
2918Sometimes you want to ignore some errors during test in that case you can
2919specify error list for each error type, instead of only being able to
2920ignore the default 'non\-fatal error' using \fBcontinue_on_error\fR.
2921`ignore_error=READ_ERR_LIST,WRITE_ERR_LIST,VERIFY_ERR_LIST' errors for
2922given error type is separated with ':'. Error may be symbol ('ENOSPC', 'ENOMEM')
2923or integer. Example:
2924.RS
2925.RS
2926.P
2927ignore_error=EAGAIN,ENOSPC:122
2928.RE
2929.P
2930This option will ignore EAGAIN from READ, and ENOSPC and 122(EDQUOT) from
2931WRITE. This option works by overriding \fBcontinue_on_error\fR with
2932the list of errors for each error type if any.
2933.RE
2934.TP
2935.BI error_dump \fR=\fPbool
2936If set dump every error even if it is non fatal, true by default. If
2937disabled only fatal error will be dumped.
2938.SS "Running predefined workloads"
2939Fio includes predefined profiles that mimic the I/O workloads generated by
2940other tools.
2941.TP
2942.BI profile \fR=\fPstr
2943The predefined workload to run. Current profiles are:
2944.RS
2945.RS
2946.TP
2947.B tiobench
2948Threaded I/O bench (tiotest/tiobench) like workload.
2949.TP
2950.B act
2951Aerospike Certification Tool (ACT) like workload.
2952.RE
2953.RE
2954.P
2955To view a profile's additional options use \fB\-\-cmdhelp\fR after specifying
2956the profile. For example:
2957.RS
2958.TP
2959$ fio \-\-profile=act \-\-cmdhelp
2960.RE
2961.SS "Act profile options"
2962.TP
2963.BI device\-names \fR=\fPstr
2964Devices to use.
2965.TP
2966.BI load \fR=\fPint
2967ACT load multiplier. Default: 1.
2968.TP
2969.BI test\-duration\fR=\fPtime
2970How long the entire test takes to run. When the unit is omitted, the value
2971is given in seconds. Default: 24h.
2972.TP
2973.BI threads\-per\-queue\fR=\fPint
2974Number of read I/O threads per device. Default: 8.
2975.TP
2976.BI read\-req\-num\-512\-blocks\fR=\fPint
2977Number of 512B blocks to read at the time. Default: 3.
2978.TP
2979.BI large\-block\-op\-kbytes\fR=\fPint
2980Size of large block ops in KiB (writes). Default: 131072.
2981.TP
2982.BI prep
2983Set to run ACT prep phase.
2984.SS "Tiobench profile options"
2985.TP
2986.BI size\fR=\fPstr
2987Size in MiB.
2988.TP
2989.BI block\fR=\fPint
2990Block size in bytes. Default: 4096.
2991.TP
2992.BI numruns\fR=\fPint
2993Number of runs.
2994.TP
2995.BI dir\fR=\fPstr
2996Test directory.
2997.TP
2998.BI threads\fR=\fPint
2999Number of threads.
3000.SH OUTPUT
3001Fio spits out a lot of output. While running, fio will display the status of the
3002jobs created. An example of that would be:
3003.P
3004.nf
3005 Jobs: 1 (f=1): [_(1),M(1)][24.8%][r=20.5MiB/s,w=23.5MiB/s][r=82,w=94 IOPS][eta 01m:31s]
3006.fi
3007.P
3008The characters inside the first set of square brackets denote the current status of
3009each thread. The first character is the first job defined in the job file, and so
3010forth. The possible values (in typical life cycle order) are:
3011.RS
3012.TP
3013.PD 0
3014.B P
3015Thread setup, but not started.
3016.TP
3017.B C
3018Thread created.
3019.TP
3020.B I
3021Thread initialized, waiting or generating necessary data.
3022.TP
3023.B p
3024Thread running pre\-reading file(s).
3025.TP
3026.B /
3027Thread is in ramp period.
3028.TP
3029.B R
3030Running, doing sequential reads.
3031.TP
3032.B r
3033Running, doing random reads.
3034.TP
3035.B W
3036Running, doing sequential writes.
3037.TP
3038.B w
3039Running, doing random writes.
3040.TP
3041.B M
3042Running, doing mixed sequential reads/writes.
3043.TP
3044.B m
3045Running, doing mixed random reads/writes.
3046.TP
3047.B D
3048Running, doing sequential trims.
3049.TP
3050.B d
3051Running, doing random trims.
3052.TP
3053.B F
3054Running, currently waiting for \fBfsync\fR\|(2).
3055.TP
3056.B V
3057Running, doing verification of written data.
3058.TP
3059.B f
3060Thread finishing.
3061.TP
3062.B E
3063Thread exited, not reaped by main thread yet.
3064.TP
3065.B \-
3066Thread reaped.
3067.TP
3068.B X
3069Thread reaped, exited with an error.
3070.TP
3071.B K
3072Thread reaped, exited due to signal.
3073.PD
3074.RE
3075.P
3076Fio will condense the thread string as not to take up more space on the command
3077line than needed. For instance, if you have 10 readers and 10 writers running,
3078the output would look like this:
3079.P
3080.nf
3081 Jobs: 20 (f=20): [R(10),W(10)][4.0%][r=20.5MiB/s,w=23.5MiB/s][r=82,w=94 IOPS][eta 57m:36s]
3082.fi
3083.P
3084Note that the status string is displayed in order, so it's possible to tell which of
3085the jobs are currently doing what. In the example above this means that jobs 1\-\-10
3086are readers and 11\-\-20 are writers.
3087.P
3088The other values are fairly self explanatory \-\- number of threads currently
3089running and doing I/O, the number of currently open files (f=), the estimated
3090completion percentage, the rate of I/O since last check (read speed listed first,
3091then write speed and optionally trim speed) in terms of bandwidth and IOPS,
3092and time to completion for the current running group. It's impossible to estimate
3093runtime of the following groups (if any).
3094.P
3095When fio is done (or interrupted by Ctrl\-C), it will show the data for
3096each thread, group of threads, and disks in that order. For each overall thread (or
3097group) the output looks like:
3098.P
3099.nf
3100 Client1: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=16109: Sat Jun 24 12:07:54 2017
3101 write: IOPS=88, BW=623KiB/s (638kB/s)(30.4MiB/50032msec)
3102 slat (nsec): min=500, max=145500, avg=8318.00, stdev=4781.50
3103 clat (usec): min=170, max=78367, avg=4019.02, stdev=8293.31
3104 lat (usec): min=174, max=78375, avg=4027.34, stdev=8291.79
3105 clat percentiles (usec):
3106 | 1.00th=[ 302], 5.00th=[ 326], 10.00th=[ 343], 20.00th=[ 363],
3107 | 30.00th=[ 392], 40.00th=[ 404], 50.00th=[ 416], 60.00th=[ 445],
3108 | 70.00th=[ 816], 80.00th=[ 6718], 90.00th=[12911], 95.00th=[21627],
3109 | 99.00th=[43779], 99.50th=[51643], 99.90th=[68682], 99.95th=[72877],
3110 | 99.99th=[78119]
3111 bw ( KiB/s): min= 532, max= 686, per=0.10%, avg=622.87, stdev=24.82, samples= 100
3112 iops : min= 76, max= 98, avg=88.98, stdev= 3.54, samples= 100
3113 lat (usec) : 250=0.04%, 500=64.11%, 750=4.81%, 1000=2.79%
3114 lat (msec) : 2=4.16%, 4=1.84%, 10=4.90%, 20=11.33%, 50=5.37%
3115 lat (msec) : 100=0.65%
3116 cpu : usr=0.27%, sys=0.18%, ctx=12072, majf=0, minf=21
3117 IO depths : 1=85.0%, 2=13.1%, 4=1.8%, 8=0.1%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, >=64=0.0%
3118 submit : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%, >=64=0.0%
3119 complete : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%, >=64=0.0%
3120 issued rwt: total=0,4450,0, short=0,0,0, dropped=0,0,0
3121 latency : target=0, window=0, percentile=100.00%, depth=8
3122.fi
3123.P
3124The job name (or first job's name when using \fBgroup_reporting\fR) is printed,
3125along with the group id, count of jobs being aggregated, last error id seen (which
3126is 0 when there are no errors), pid/tid of that thread and the time the job/group
3127completed. Below are the I/O statistics for each data direction performed (showing
3128writes in the example above). In the order listed, they denote:
3129.RS
3130.TP
3131.B read/write/trim
3132The string before the colon shows the I/O direction the statistics
3133are for. \fIIOPS\fR is the average I/Os performed per second. \fIBW\fR
3134is the average bandwidth rate shown as: value in power of 2 format
3135(value in power of 10 format). The last two values show: (total
3136I/O performed in power of 2 format / \fIruntime\fR of that thread).
3137.TP
3138.B slat
3139Submission latency (\fImin\fR being the minimum, \fImax\fR being the
3140maximum, \fIavg\fR being the average, \fIstdev\fR being the standard
3141deviation). This is the time it took to submit the I/O. For
3142sync I/O this row is not displayed as the slat is really the
3143completion latency (since queue/complete is one operation there).
3144This value can be in nanoseconds, microseconds or milliseconds \-\-\-
3145fio will choose the most appropriate base and print that (in the
3146example above nanoseconds was the best scale). Note: in \fB\-\-minimal\fR mode
3147latencies are always expressed in microseconds.
3148.TP
3149.B clat
3150Completion latency. Same names as slat, this denotes the time from
3151submission to completion of the I/O pieces. For sync I/O, clat will
3152usually be equal (or very close) to 0, as the time from submit to
3153complete is basically just CPU time (I/O has already been done, see slat
3154explanation).
3155.TP
3156.B lat
3157Total latency. Same names as slat and clat, this denotes the time from
3158when fio created the I/O unit to completion of the I/O operation.
3159.TP
3160.B bw
3161Bandwidth statistics based on samples. Same names as the xlat stats,
3162but also includes the number of samples taken (\fIsamples\fR) and an
3163approximate percentage of total aggregate bandwidth this thread
3164received in its group (\fIper\fR). This last value is only really
3165useful if the threads in this group are on the same disk, since they
3166are then competing for disk access.
3167.TP
3168.B iops
3169IOPS statistics based on samples. Same names as \fBbw\fR.
3170.TP
3171.B lat (nsec/usec/msec)
3172The distribution of I/O completion latencies. This is the time from when
3173I/O leaves fio and when it gets completed. Unlike the separate
3174read/write/trim sections above, the data here and in the remaining
3175sections apply to all I/Os for the reporting group. 250=0.04% means that
31760.04% of the I/Os completed in under 250us. 500=64.11% means that 64.11%
3177of the I/Os required 250 to 499us for completion.
3178.TP
3179.B cpu
3180CPU usage. User and system time, along with the number of context
3181switches this thread went through, usage of system and user time, and
3182finally the number of major and minor page faults. The CPU utilization
3183numbers are averages for the jobs in that reporting group, while the
3184context and fault counters are summed.
3185.TP
3186.B IO depths
3187The distribution of I/O depths over the job lifetime. The numbers are
3188divided into powers of 2 and each entry covers depths from that value
3189up to those that are lower than the next entry \-\- e.g., 16= covers
3190depths from 16 to 31. Note that the range covered by a depth
3191distribution entry can be different to the range covered by the
3192equivalent \fBsubmit\fR/\fBcomplete\fR distribution entry.
3193.TP
3194.B IO submit
3195How many pieces of I/O were submitting in a single submit call. Each
3196entry denotes that amount and below, until the previous entry \-\- e.g.,
319716=100% means that we submitted anywhere between 9 to 16 I/Os per submit
3198call. Note that the range covered by a \fBsubmit\fR distribution entry can
3199be different to the range covered by the equivalent depth distribution
3200entry.
3201.TP
3202.B IO complete
3203Like the above \fBsubmit\fR number, but for completions instead.
3204.TP
3205.B IO issued rwt
3206The number of \fBread/write/trim\fR requests issued, and how many of them were
3207short or dropped.
3208.TP
3209.B IO latency
3210These values are for \fBlatency_target\fR and related options. When
3211these options are engaged, this section describes the I/O depth required
3212to meet the specified latency target.
3213.RE
3214.P
3215After each client has been listed, the group statistics are printed. They
3216will look like this:
3217.P
3218.nf
3219 Run status group 0 (all jobs):
3220 READ: bw=20.9MiB/s (21.9MB/s), 10.4MiB/s\-10.8MiB/s (10.9MB/s\-11.3MB/s), io=64.0MiB (67.1MB), run=2973\-3069msec
3221 WRITE: bw=1231KiB/s (1261kB/s), 616KiB/s\-621KiB/s (630kB/s\-636kB/s), io=64.0MiB (67.1MB), run=52747\-53223msec
3222.fi
3223.P
3224For each data direction it prints:
3225.RS
3226.TP
3227.B bw
3228Aggregate bandwidth of threads in this group followed by the
3229minimum and maximum bandwidth of all the threads in this group.
3230Values outside of brackets are power\-of\-2 format and those
3231within are the equivalent value in a power\-of\-10 format.
3232.TP
3233.B io
3234Aggregate I/O performed of all threads in this group. The
3235format is the same as \fBbw\fR.
3236.TP
3237.B run
3238The smallest and longest runtimes of the threads in this group.
3239.RE
3240.P
3241And finally, the disk statistics are printed. This is Linux specific.
3242They will look like this:
3243.P
3244.nf
3245 Disk stats (read/write):
3246 sda: ios=16398/16511, merge=30/162, ticks=6853/819634, in_queue=826487, util=100.00%
3247.fi
3248.P
3249Each value is printed for both reads and writes, with reads first. The
3250numbers denote:
3251.RS
3252.TP
3253.B ios
3254Number of I/Os performed by all groups.
3255.TP
3256.B merge
3257Number of merges performed by the I/O scheduler.
3258.TP
3259.B ticks
3260Number of ticks we kept the disk busy.
3261.TP
3262.B in_queue
3263Total time spent in the disk queue.
3264.TP
3265.B util
3266The disk utilization. A value of 100% means we kept the disk
3267busy constantly, 50% would be a disk idling half of the time.
3268.RE
3269.P
3270It is also possible to get fio to dump the current output while it is running,
3271without terminating the job. To do that, send fio the USR1 signal. You can
3272also get regularly timed dumps by using the \fB\-\-status\-interval\fR
3273parameter, or by creating a file in `/tmp' named
3274`fio\-dump\-status'. If fio sees this file, it will unlink it and dump the
3275current output status.
3276.SH TERSE OUTPUT
3277For scripted usage where you typically want to generate tables or graphs of the
3278results, fio can output the results in a semicolon separated format. The format
3279is one long line of values, such as:
3280.P
3281.nf
3282 2;card0;0;0;7139336;121836;60004;1;10109;27.932460;116.933948;220;126861;3495.446807;1085.368601;226;126864;3523.635629;1089.012448;24063;99944;50.275485%;59818.274627;5540.657370;7155060;122104;60004;1;8338;29.086342;117.839068;388;128077;5032.488518;1234.785715;391;128085;5061.839412;1236.909129;23436;100928;50.287926%;59964.832030;5644.844189;14.595833%;19.394167%;123706;0;7313;0.1%;0.1%;0.1%;0.1%;0.1%;0.1%;100.0%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.01%;0.02%;0.05%;0.16%;6.04%;40.40%;52.68%;0.64%;0.01%;0.00%;0.01%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%;0.00%
3283 A description of this job goes here.
3284.fi
3285.P
3286The job description (if provided) follows on a second line.
3287.P
3288To enable terse output, use the \fB\-\-minimal\fR or
3289`\-\-output\-format=terse' command line options. The
3290first value is the version of the terse output format. If the output has to be
3291changed for some reason, this number will be incremented by 1 to signify that
3292change.
3293.P
3294Split up, the format is as follows (comments in brackets denote when a
3295field was introduced or whether it's specific to some terse version):
3296.P
3297.nf
3298 terse version, fio version [v3], jobname, groupid, error
3299.fi
3300.RS
3301.P
3302.B
3303READ status:
3304.RE
3305.P
3306.nf
3307 Total IO (KiB), bandwidth (KiB/sec), IOPS, runtime (msec)
3308 Submission latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3309 Completion latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3310 Completion latency percentiles: 20 fields (see below)
3311 Total latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3312 Bw (KiB/s): min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, stdev, number of samples [v5]
3313 IOPS [v5]: min, max, mean, stdev, number of samples
3314.fi
3315.RS
3316.P
3317.B
3318WRITE status:
3319.RE
3320.P
3321.nf
3322 Total IO (KiB), bandwidth (KiB/sec), IOPS, runtime (msec)
3323 Submission latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3324 Completion latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3325 Completion latency percentiles: 20 fields (see below)
3326 Total latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
3327 Bw (KiB/s): min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, stdev, number of samples [v5]
3328 IOPS [v5]: min, max, mean, stdev, number of samples
3329.fi
3330.RS
3331.P
3332.B
3333TRIM status [all but version 3]:
3334.RE
3335.P
3336.nf
3337 Fields are similar to \fBREAD/WRITE\fR status.
3338.fi
3339.RS
3340.P
3341.B
3342CPU usage:
3343.RE
3344.P
3345.nf
3346 user, system, context switches, major faults, minor faults
3347.fi
3348.RS
3349.P
3350.B
3351I/O depths:
3352.RE
3353.P
3354.nf
3355 <=1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, >=64
3356.fi
3357.RS
3358.P
3359.B
3360I/O latencies microseconds:
3361.RE
3362.P
3363.nf
3364 <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000
3365.fi
3366.RS
3367.P
3368.B
3369I/O latencies milliseconds:
3370.RE
3371.P
3372.nf
3373 <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000, 2000, >=2000
3374.fi
3375.RS
3376.P
3377.B
3378Disk utilization [v3]:
3379.RE
3380.P
3381.nf
3382 disk name, read ios, write ios, read merges, write merges, read ticks, write ticks, time spent in queue, disk utilization percentage
3383.fi
3384.RS
3385.P
3386.B
3387Additional Info (dependent on continue_on_error, default off):
3388.RE
3389.P
3390.nf
3391 total # errors, first error code
3392.fi
3393.RS
3394.P
3395.B
3396Additional Info (dependent on description being set):
3397.RE
3398.P
3399.nf
3400 Text description
3401.fi
3402.P
3403Completion latency percentiles can be a grouping of up to 20 sets, so for the
3404terse output fio writes all of them. Each field will look like this:
3405.P
3406.nf
3407 1.00%=6112
3408.fi
3409.P
3410which is the Xth percentile, and the `usec' latency associated with it.
3411.P
3412For \fBDisk utilization\fR, all disks used by fio are shown. So for each disk there
3413will be a disk utilization section.
3414.P
3415Below is a single line containing short names for each of the fields in the
3416minimal output v3, separated by semicolons:
3417.P
3418.nf
3419 terse_version_3;fio_version;jobname;groupid;error;read_kb;read_bandwidth;read_iops;read_runtime_ms;read_slat_min;read_slat_max;read_slat_mean;read_slat_dev;read_clat_min;read_clat_max;read_clat_mean;read_clat_dev;read_clat_pct01;read_clat_pct02;read_clat_pct03;read_clat_pct04;read_clat_pct05;read_clat_pct06;read_clat_pct07;read_clat_pct08;read_clat_pct09;read_clat_pct10;read_clat_pct11;read_clat_pct12;read_clat_pct13;read_clat_pct14;read_clat_pct15;read_clat_pct16;read_clat_pct17;read_clat_pct18;read_clat_pct19;read_clat_pct20;read_tlat_min;read_lat_max;read_lat_mean;read_lat_dev;read_bw_min;read_bw_max;read_bw_agg_pct;read_bw_mean;read_bw_dev;write_kb;write_bandwidth;write_iops;write_runtime_ms;write_slat_min;write_slat_max;write_slat_mean;write_slat_dev;write_clat_min;write_clat_max;write_clat_mean;write_clat_dev;write_clat_pct01;write_clat_pct02;write_clat_pct03;write_clat_pct04;write_clat_pct05;write_clat_pct06;write_clat_pct07;write_clat_pct08;write_clat_pct09;write_clat_pct10;write_clat_pct11;write_clat_pct12;write_clat_pct13;write_clat_pct14;write_clat_pct15;write_clat_pct16;write_clat_pct17;write_clat_pct18;write_clat_pct19;write_clat_pct20;write_tlat_min;write_lat_max;write_lat_mean;write_lat_dev;write_bw_min;write_bw_max;write_bw_agg_pct;write_bw_mean;write_bw_dev;cpu_user;cpu_sys;cpu_csw;cpu_mjf;cpu_minf;iodepth_1;iodepth_2;iodepth_4;iodepth_8;iodepth_16;iodepth_32;iodepth_64;lat_2us;lat_4us;lat_10us;lat_20us;lat_50us;lat_100us;lat_250us;lat_500us;lat_750us;lat_1000us;lat_2ms;lat_4ms;lat_10ms;lat_20ms;lat_50ms;lat_100ms;lat_250ms;lat_500ms;lat_750ms;lat_1000ms;lat_2000ms;lat_over_2000ms;disk_name;disk_read_iops;disk_write_iops;disk_read_merges;disk_write_merges;disk_read_ticks;write_ticks;disk_queue_time;disk_util
3420.fi
3421.SH JSON OUTPUT
3422The \fBjson\fR output format is intended to be both human readable and convenient
3423for automated parsing. For the most part its sections mirror those of the
3424\fBnormal\fR output. The \fBruntime\fR value is reported in msec and the \fBbw\fR value is
3425reported in 1024 bytes per second units.
3426.fi
3427.SH JSON+ OUTPUT
3428The \fBjson+\fR output format is identical to the \fBjson\fR output format except that it
3429adds a full dump of the completion latency bins. Each \fBbins\fR object contains a
3430set of (key, value) pairs where keys are latency durations and values count how
3431many I/Os had completion latencies of the corresponding duration. For example,
3432consider:
3433.RS
3434.P
3435"bins" : { "87552" : 1, "89600" : 1, "94720" : 1, "96768" : 1, "97792" : 1, "99840" : 1, "100864" : 2, "103936" : 6, "104960" : 534, "105984" : 5995, "107008" : 7529, ... }
3436.RE
3437.P
3438This data indicates that one I/O required 87,552ns to complete, two I/Os required
3439100,864ns to complete, and 7529 I/Os required 107,008ns to complete.
3440.P
3441Also included with fio is a Python script \fBfio_jsonplus_clat2csv\fR that takes
3442json+ output and generates CSV\-formatted latency data suitable for plotting.
3443.P
3444The latency durations actually represent the midpoints of latency intervals.
3445For details refer to `stat.h' in the fio source.
3446.SH TRACE FILE FORMAT
3447There are two trace file format that you can encounter. The older (v1) format is
3448unsupported since version 1.20\-rc3 (March 2008). It will still be described
3449below in case that you get an old trace and want to understand it.
3450.P
3451In any case the trace is a simple text file with a single action per line.
3452.TP
3453.B Trace file format v1
3454Each line represents a single I/O action in the following format:
3455.RS
3456.RS
3457.P
3458rw, offset, length
3459.RE
3460.P
3461where `rw=0/1' for read/write, and the `offset' and `length' entries being in bytes.
3462.P
3463This format is not supported in fio versions >= 1.20\-rc3.
3464.RE
3465.TP
3466.B Trace file format v2
3467The second version of the trace file format was added in fio version 1.17. It
3468allows to access more then one file per trace and has a bigger set of possible
3469file actions.
3470.RS
3471.P
3472The first line of the trace file has to be:
3473.RS
3474.P
3475"fio version 2 iolog"
3476.RE
3477.P
3478Following this can be lines in two different formats, which are described below.
3479.P
3480.B
3481The file management format:
3482.RS
3483filename action
3484.P
3485The `filename' is given as an absolute path. The `action' can be one of these:
3486.RS
3487.TP
3488.B add
3489Add the given `filename' to the trace.
3490.TP
3491.B open
3492Open the file with the given `filename'. The `filename' has to have
3493been added with the \fBadd\fR action before.
3494.TP
3495.B close
3496Close the file with the given `filename'. The file has to have been
3497\fBopen\fRed before.
3498.RE
3499.RE
3500.P
3501.B
3502The file I/O action format:
3503.RS
3504filename action offset length
3505.P
3506The `filename' is given as an absolute path, and has to have been \fBadd\fRed and
3507\fBopen\fRed before it can be used with this format. The `offset' and `length' are
3508given in bytes. The `action' can be one of these:
3509.RS
3510.TP
3511.B wait
3512Wait for `offset' microseconds. Everything below 100 is discarded.
3513The time is relative to the previous `wait' statement.
3514.TP
3515.B read
3516Read `length' bytes beginning from `offset'.
3517.TP
3518.B write
3519Write `length' bytes beginning from `offset'.
3520.TP
3521.B sync
3522\fBfsync\fR\|(2) the file.
3523.TP
3524.B datasync
3525\fBfdatasync\fR\|(2) the file.
3526.TP
3527.B trim
3528Trim the given file from the given `offset' for `length' bytes.
3529.RE
3530.RE
3531.SH CPU IDLENESS PROFILING
3532In some cases, we want to understand CPU overhead in a test. For example, we
3533test patches for the specific goodness of whether they reduce CPU usage.
3534Fio implements a balloon approach to create a thread per CPU that runs at idle
3535priority, meaning that it only runs when nobody else needs the cpu.
3536By measuring the amount of work completed by the thread, idleness of each CPU
3537can be derived accordingly.
3538.P
3539An unit work is defined as touching a full page of unsigned characters. Mean and
3540standard deviation of time to complete an unit work is reported in "unit work"
3541section. Options can be chosen to report detailed percpu idleness or overall
3542system idleness by aggregating percpu stats.
3543.SH VERIFICATION AND TRIGGERS
3544Fio is usually run in one of two ways, when data verification is done. The first
3545is a normal write job of some sort with verify enabled. When the write phase has
3546completed, fio switches to reads and verifies everything it wrote. The second
3547model is running just the write phase, and then later on running the same job
3548(but with reads instead of writes) to repeat the same I/O patterns and verify
3549the contents. Both of these methods depend on the write phase being completed,
3550as fio otherwise has no idea how much data was written.
3551.P
3552With verification triggers, fio supports dumping the current write state to
3553local files. Then a subsequent read verify workload can load this state and know
3554exactly where to stop. This is useful for testing cases where power is cut to a
3555server in a managed fashion, for instance.
3556.P
3557A verification trigger consists of two things:
3558.RS
3559.P
35601) Storing the write state of each job.
3561.P
35622) Executing a trigger command.
3563.RE
3564.P
3565The write state is relatively small, on the order of hundreds of bytes to single
3566kilobytes. It contains information on the number of completions done, the last X
3567completions, etc.
3568.P
3569A trigger is invoked either through creation ('touch') of a specified file in
3570the system, or through a timeout setting. If fio is run with
3571`\-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/trigger\-file', then it will continually
3572check for the existence of `/tmp/trigger\-file'. When it sees this file, it
3573will fire off the trigger (thus saving state, and executing the trigger
3574command).
3575.P
3576For client/server runs, there's both a local and remote trigger. If fio is
3577running as a server backend, it will send the job states back to the client for
3578safe storage, then execute the remote trigger, if specified. If a local trigger
3579is specified, the server will still send back the write state, but the client
3580will then execute the trigger.
3581.RE
3582.P
3583.B Verification trigger example
3584.RS
3585Let's say we want to run a powercut test on the remote Linux machine 'server'.
3586Our write workload is in `write\-test.fio'. We want to cut power to 'server' at
3587some point during the run, and we'll run this test from the safety or our local
3588machine, 'localbox'. On the server, we'll start the fio backend normally:
3589.RS
3590.P
3591server# fio \-\-server
3592.RE
3593.P
3594and on the client, we'll fire off the workload:
3595.RS
3596.P
3597localbox$ fio \-\-client=server \-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/my\-trigger \-\-trigger\-remote="bash \-c "echo b > /proc/sysrq\-triger""
3598.RE
3599.P
3600We set `/tmp/my\-trigger' as the trigger file, and we tell fio to execute:
3601.RS
3602.P
3603echo b > /proc/sysrq\-trigger
3604.RE
3605.P
3606on the server once it has received the trigger and sent us the write state. This
3607will work, but it's not really cutting power to the server, it's merely
3608abruptly rebooting it. If we have a remote way of cutting power to the server
3609through IPMI or similar, we could do that through a local trigger command
3610instead. Let's assume we have a script that does IPMI reboot of a given hostname,
3611ipmi\-reboot. On localbox, we could then have run fio with a local trigger
3612instead:
3613.RS
3614.P
3615localbox$ fio \-\-client=server \-\-trigger\-file=/tmp/my\-trigger \-\-trigger="ipmi\-reboot server"
3616.RE
3617.P
3618For this case, fio would wait for the server to send us the write state, then
3619execute `ipmi\-reboot server' when that happened.
3620.RE
3621.P
3622.B Loading verify state
3623.RS
3624To load stored write state, a read verification job file must contain the
3625\fBverify_state_load\fR option. If that is set, fio will load the previously
3626stored state. For a local fio run this is done by loading the files directly,
3627and on a client/server run, the server backend will ask the client to send the
3628files over and load them from there.
3629.RE
3630.SH LOG FILE FORMATS
3631Fio supports a variety of log file formats, for logging latencies, bandwidth,
3632and IOPS. The logs share a common format, which looks like this:
3633.RS
3634.P
3635time (msec), value, data direction, block size (bytes), offset (bytes)
3636.RE
3637.P
3638`Time' for the log entry is always in milliseconds. The `value' logged depends
3639on the type of log, it will be one of the following:
3640.RS
3641.TP
3642.B Latency log
3643Value is latency in nsecs
3644.TP
3645.B Bandwidth log
3646Value is in KiB/sec
3647.TP
3648.B IOPS log
3649Value is IOPS
3650.RE
3651.P
3652`Data direction' is one of the following:
3653.RS
3654.TP
3655.B 0
3656I/O is a READ
3657.TP
3658.B 1
3659I/O is a WRITE
3660.TP
3661.B 2
3662I/O is a TRIM
3663.RE
3664.P
3665The entry's `block size' is always in bytes. The `offset' is the position in bytes
3666from the start of the file for that particular I/O. The logging of the offset can be
3667toggled with \fBlog_offset\fR.
3668.P
3669Fio defaults to logging every individual I/O but when windowed logging is set
3670through \fBlog_avg_msec\fR, either the average (by default) or the maximum
3671(\fBlog_max_value\fR is set) `value' seen over the specified period of time
3672is recorded. Each `data direction' seen within the window period will aggregate
3673its values in a separate row. Further, when using windowed logging the `block
3674size' and `offset' entries will always contain 0.
3675.SH CLIENT / SERVER
3676Normally fio is invoked as a stand\-alone application on the machine where the
3677I/O workload should be generated. However, the backend and frontend of fio can
3678be run separately i.e., the fio server can generate an I/O workload on the "Device
3679Under Test" while being controlled by a client on another machine.
3680.P
3681Start the server on the machine which has access to the storage DUT:
3682.RS
3683.P
3684$ fio \-\-server=args
3685.RE
3686.P
3687where `args' defines what fio listens to. The arguments are of the form
3688`type,hostname' or `IP,port'. `type' is either `ip' (or ip4) for TCP/IP
3689v4, `ip6' for TCP/IP v6, or `sock' for a local unix domain socket.
3690`hostname' is either a hostname or IP address, and `port' is the port to listen
3691to (only valid for TCP/IP, not a local socket). Some examples:
3692.RS
3693.TP
36941) \fBfio \-\-server\fR
3695Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on the default port (8765).
3696.TP
36972) \fBfio \-\-server=ip:hostname,4444\fR
3698Start a fio server, listening on IP belonging to hostname and on port 4444.
3699.TP
37003) \fBfio \-\-server=ip6:::1,4444\fR
3701Start a fio server, listening on IPv6 localhost ::1 and on port 4444.
3702.TP
37034) \fBfio \-\-server=,4444\fR
3704Start a fio server, listening on all interfaces on port 4444.
3705.TP
37065) \fBfio \-\-server=1.2.3.4\fR
3707Start a fio server, listening on IP 1.2.3.4 on the default port.
3708.TP
37096) \fBfio \-\-server=sock:/tmp/fio.sock\fR
3710Start a fio server, listening on the local socket `/tmp/fio.sock'.
3711.RE
3712.P
3713Once a server is running, a "client" can connect to the fio server with:
3714.RS
3715.P
3716$ fio <local\-args> \-\-client=<server> <remote\-args> <job file(s)>
3717.RE
3718.P
3719where `local\-args' are arguments for the client where it is running, `server'
3720is the connect string, and `remote\-args' and `job file(s)' are sent to the
3721server. The `server' string follows the same format as it does on the server
3722side, to allow IP/hostname/socket and port strings.
3723.P
3724Fio can connect to multiple servers this way:
3725.RS
3726.P
3727$ fio \-\-client=<server1> <job file(s)> \-\-client=<server2> <job file(s)>
3728.RE
3729.P
3730If the job file is located on the fio server, then you can tell the server to
3731load a local file as well. This is done by using \fB\-\-remote\-config\fR:
3732.RS
3733.P
3734$ fio \-\-client=server \-\-remote\-config /path/to/file.fio
3735.RE
3736.P
3737Then fio will open this local (to the server) job file instead of being passed
3738one from the client.
3739.P
3740If you have many servers (example: 100 VMs/containers), you can input a pathname
3741of a file containing host IPs/names as the parameter value for the
3742\fB\-\-client\fR option. For example, here is an example `host.list'
3743file containing 2 hostnames:
3744.RS
3745.P
3746.PD 0
3747host1.your.dns.domain
3748.P
3749host2.your.dns.domain
3750.PD
3751.RE
3752.P
3753The fio command would then be:
3754.RS
3755.P
3756$ fio \-\-client=host.list <job file(s)>
3757.RE
3758.P
3759In this mode, you cannot input server\-specific parameters or job files \-\- all
3760servers receive the same job file.
3761.P
3762In order to let `fio \-\-client' runs use a shared filesystem from multiple
3763hosts, `fio \-\-client' now prepends the IP address of the server to the
3764filename. For example, if fio is using the directory `/mnt/nfs/fio' and is
3765writing filename `fileio.tmp', with a \fB\-\-client\fR `hostfile'
3766containing two hostnames `h1' and `h2' with IP addresses 192.168.10.120 and
3767192.168.10.121, then fio will create two files:
3768.RS
3769.P
3770.PD 0
3771/mnt/nfs/fio/192.168.10.120.fileio.tmp
3772.P
3773/mnt/nfs/fio/192.168.10.121.fileio.tmp
3774.PD
3775.RE
3776.SH AUTHORS
3777.B fio
3778was written by Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>.
3779.br
3780This man page was written by Aaron Carroll <aaronc@cse.unsw.edu.au> based
3781on documentation by Jens Axboe.
3782.br
3783This man page was rewritten by Tomohiro Kusumi <tkusumi@tuxera.com> based
3784on documentation by Jens Axboe.
3785.SH "REPORTING BUGS"
3786Report bugs to the \fBfio\fR mailing list <fio@vger.kernel.org>.
3787.br
3788See \fBREPORTING\-BUGS\fR.
3789.P
3790\fBREPORTING\-BUGS\fR: \fIhttp://git.kernel.dk/cgit/fio/plain/REPORTING\-BUGS\fR
3791.SH "SEE ALSO"
3792For further documentation see \fBHOWTO\fR and \fBREADME\fR.
3793.br
3794Sample jobfiles are available in the `examples/' directory.
3795.br
3796These are typically located under `/usr/share/doc/fio'.
3797.P
3798\fBHOWTO\fR: \fIhttp://git.kernel.dk/cgit/fio/plain/HOWTO\fR
3799.br
3800\fBREADME\fR: \fIhttp://git.kernel.dk/cgit/fio/plain/README\fR