Add ioprio_set() support for DragonFlyBSD
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1Table of contents
2-----------------
3
41. Overview
52. How fio works
63. Running fio
74. Job file format
85. Detailed list of parameters
96. Normal output
107. Terse output
118. Trace file format
129. CPU idleness profiling
1310. Verification and triggers
1411. Log File Formats
15
16
171.0 Overview and history
18------------------------
19fio was originally written to save me the hassle of writing special test
20case programs when I wanted to test a specific workload, either for
21performance reasons or to find/reproduce a bug. The process of writing
22such a test app can be tiresome, especially if you have to do it often.
23Hence I needed a tool that would be able to simulate a given io workload
24without resorting to writing a tailored test case again and again.
25
26A test work load is difficult to define, though. There can be any number
27of processes or threads involved, and they can each be using their own
28way of generating io. You could have someone dirtying large amounts of
29memory in an memory mapped file, or maybe several threads issuing
30reads using asynchronous io. fio needed to be flexible enough to
31simulate both of these cases, and many more.
32
332.0 How fio works
34-----------------
35The first step in getting fio to simulate a desired io workload, is
36writing a job file describing that specific setup. A job file may contain
37any number of threads and/or files - the typical contents of the job file
38is a global section defining shared parameters, and one or more job
39sections describing the jobs involved. When run, fio parses this file
40and sets everything up as described. If we break down a job from top to
41bottom, it contains the following basic parameters:
42
43 IO type Defines the io pattern issued to the file(s).
44 We may only be reading sequentially from this
45 file(s), or we may be writing randomly. Or even
46 mixing reads and writes, sequentially or randomly.
47
48 Block size In how large chunks are we issuing io? This may be
49 a single value, or it may describe a range of
50 block sizes.
51
52 IO size How much data are we going to be reading/writing.
53
54 IO engine How do we issue io? We could be memory mapping the
55 file, we could be using regular read/write, we
56 could be using splice, async io, or even SG
57 (SCSI generic sg).
58
59 IO depth If the io engine is async, how large a queuing
60 depth do we want to maintain?
61
62 IO type Should we be doing buffered io, or direct/raw io?
63
64 Num files How many files are we spreading the workload over.
65
66 Num threads How many threads or processes should we spread
67 this workload over.
68
69The above are the basic parameters defined for a workload, in addition
70there's a multitude of parameters that modify other aspects of how this
71job behaves.
72
73
743.0 Running fio
75---------------
76See the README file for command line parameters, there are only a few
77of them.
78
79Running fio is normally the easiest part - you just give it the job file
80(or job files) as parameters:
81
82$ fio job_file
83
84and it will start doing what the job_file tells it to do. You can give
85more than one job file on the command line, fio will serialize the running
86of those files. Internally that is the same as using the 'stonewall'
87parameter described in the parameter section.
88
89If the job file contains only one job, you may as well just give the
90parameters on the command line. The command line parameters are identical
91to the job parameters, with a few extra that control global parameters
92(see README). For example, for the job file parameter iodepth=2, the
93mirror command line option would be --iodepth 2 or --iodepth=2. You can
94also use the command line for giving more than one job entry. For each
95--name option that fio sees, it will start a new job with that name.
96Command line entries following a --name entry will apply to that job,
97until there are no more entries or a new --name entry is seen. This is
98similar to the job file options, where each option applies to the current
99job until a new [] job entry is seen.
100
101fio does not need to run as root, except if the files or devices specified
102in the job section requires that. Some other options may also be restricted,
103such as memory locking, io scheduler switching, and decreasing the nice value.
104
105
1064.0 Job file format
107-------------------
108As previously described, fio accepts one or more job files describing
109what it is supposed to do. The job file format is the classic ini file,
110where the names enclosed in [] brackets define the job name. You are free
111to use any ascii name you want, except 'global' which has special meaning.
112A global section sets defaults for the jobs described in that file. A job
113may override a global section parameter, and a job file may even have
114several global sections if so desired. A job is only affected by a global
115section residing above it. If the first character in a line is a ';' or a
116'#', the entire line is discarded as a comment.
117
118So let's look at a really simple job file that defines two processes, each
119randomly reading from a 128MB file.
120
121; -- start job file --
122[global]
123rw=randread
124size=128m
125
126[job1]
127
128[job2]
129
130; -- end job file --
131
132As you can see, the job file sections themselves are empty as all the
133described parameters are shared. As no filename= option is given, fio
134makes up a filename for each of the jobs as it sees fit. On the command
135line, this job would look as follows:
136
137$ fio --name=global --rw=randread --size=128m --name=job1 --name=job2
138
139
140Let's look at an example that has a number of processes writing randomly
141to files.
142
143; -- start job file --
144[random-writers]
145ioengine=libaio
146iodepth=4
147rw=randwrite
148bs=32k
149direct=0
150size=64m
151numjobs=4
152
153; -- end job file --
154
155Here we have no global section, as we only have one job defined anyway.
156We want to use async io here, with a depth of 4 for each file. We also
157increased the buffer size used to 32KB and define numjobs to 4 to
158fork 4 identical jobs. The result is 4 processes each randomly writing
159to their own 64MB file. Instead of using the above job file, you could
160have given the parameters on the command line. For this case, you would
161specify:
162
163$ fio --name=random-writers --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=4 --rw=randwrite --bs=32k --direct=0 --size=64m --numjobs=4
164
165When fio is utilized as a basis of any reasonably large test suite, it might be
166desirable to share a set of standardized settings across multiple job files.
167Instead of copy/pasting such settings, any section may pull in an external
168.fio file with 'include filename' directive, as in the following example:
169
170; -- start job file including.fio --
171[global]
172filename=/tmp/test
173filesize=1m
174include glob-include.fio
175
176[test]
177rw=randread
178bs=4k
179time_based=1
180runtime=10
181include test-include.fio
182; -- end job file including.fio --
183
184; -- start job file glob-include.fio --
185thread=1
186group_reporting=1
187; -- end job file glob-include.fio --
188
189; -- start job file test-include.fio --
190ioengine=libaio
191iodepth=4
192; -- end job file test-include.fio --
193
194Settings pulled into a section apply to that section only (except global
195section). Include directives may be nested in that any included file may
196contain further include directive(s). Include files may not contain []
197sections.
198
199
2004.1 Environment variables
201-------------------------
202
203fio also supports environment variable expansion in job files. Any
204sub-string of the form "${VARNAME}" as part of an option value (in other
205words, on the right of the `='), will be expanded to the value of the
206environment variable called VARNAME. If no such environment variable
207is defined, or VARNAME is the empty string, the empty string will be
208substituted.
209
210As an example, let's look at a sample fio invocation and job file:
211
212$ SIZE=64m NUMJOBS=4 fio jobfile.fio
213
214; -- start job file --
215[random-writers]
216rw=randwrite
217size=${SIZE}
218numjobs=${NUMJOBS}
219; -- end job file --
220
221This will expand to the following equivalent job file at runtime:
222
223; -- start job file --
224[random-writers]
225rw=randwrite
226size=64m
227numjobs=4
228; -- end job file --
229
230fio ships with a few example job files, you can also look there for
231inspiration.
232
2334.2 Reserved keywords
234---------------------
235
236Additionally, fio has a set of reserved keywords that will be replaced
237internally with the appropriate value. Those keywords are:
238
239$pagesize The architecture page size of the running system
240$mb_memory Megabytes of total memory in the system
241$ncpus Number of online available CPUs
242
243These can be used on the command line or in the job file, and will be
244automatically substituted with the current system values when the job
245is run. Simple math is also supported on these keywords, so you can
246perform actions like:
247
248size=8*$mb_memory
249
250and get that properly expanded to 8 times the size of memory in the
251machine.
252
253
2545.0 Detailed list of parameters
255-------------------------------
256
257This section describes in details each parameter associated with a job.
258Some parameters take an option of a given type, such as an integer or
259a string. Anywhere a numeric value is required, an arithmetic expression
260may be used, provided it is surrounded by parentheses. Supported operators
261are:
262
263 addition (+)
264 subtraction (-)
265 multiplication (*)
266 division (/)
267 modulus (%)
268 exponentiation (^)
269
270For time values in expressions, units are microseconds by default. This is
271different than for time values not in expressions (not enclosed in
272parentheses). The following types are used:
273
274str String. This is a sequence of alpha characters.
275time Integer with possible time suffix. In seconds unless otherwise
276 specified, use eg 10m for 10 minutes. Accepts s/m/h for seconds,
277 minutes, and hours, and accepts 'ms' (or 'msec') for milliseconds,
278 and 'us' (or 'usec') for microseconds.
279int SI integer. A whole number value, which may contain a suffix
280 describing the base of the number. Accepted suffixes are k/m/g/t/p,
281 meaning kilo, mega, giga, tera, and peta. The suffix is not case
282 sensitive, and you may also include trailing 'b' (eg 'kb' is the same
283 as 'k'). So if you want to specify 4096, you could either write
284 out '4096' or just give 4k. The suffixes signify base 2 values, so
285 1024 is 1k and 1024k is 1m and so on, unless the suffix is explicitly
286 set to a base 10 value using 'kib', 'mib', 'gib', etc. If that is the
287 case, then 1000 is used as the multiplier. This can be handy for
288 disks, since manufacturers generally use base 10 values when listing
289 the capacity of a drive. If the option accepts an upper and lower
290 range, use a colon ':' or minus '-' to separate such values. May also
291 include a prefix to indicate numbers base. If 0x is used, the number
292 is assumed to be hexadecimal. See irange.
293bool Boolean. Usually parsed as an integer, however only defined for
294 true and false (1 and 0).
295irange Integer range with suffix. Allows value range to be given, such
296 as 1024-4096. A colon may also be used as the separator, eg
297 1k:4k. If the option allows two sets of ranges, they can be
298 specified with a ',' or '/' delimiter: 1k-4k/8k-32k. Also see
299 int.
300float_list A list of floating numbers, separated by a ':' character.
301
302With the above in mind, here follows the complete list of fio job
303parameters.
304
305name=str ASCII name of the job. This may be used to override the
306 name printed by fio for this job. Otherwise the job
307 name is used. On the command line this parameter has the
308 special purpose of also signaling the start of a new
309 job.
310
311wait_for=str Specifies the name of the already defined job to wait
312 for. Single waitee name only may be specified. If set, the job
313 won't be started until all workers of the waitee job are done.
314
315 Wait_for operates on the job name basis, so there are a few
316 limitations. First, the waitee must be defined prior to the
317 waiter job (meaning no forward references). Second, if a job
318 is being referenced as a waitee, it must have a unique name
319 (no duplicate waitees).
320
321description=str Text description of the job. Doesn't do anything except
322 dump this text description when this job is run. It's
323 not parsed.
324
325directory=str Prefix filenames with this directory. Used to place files
326 in a different location than "./". See the 'filename' option
327 for escaping certain characters.
328
329filename=str Fio normally makes up a filename based on the job name,
330 thread number, and file number. If you want to share
331 files between threads in a job or several jobs, specify
332 a filename for each of them to override the default.
333 If the ioengine is file based, you can specify a number of
334 files by separating the names with a ':' colon. So if you
335 wanted a job to open /dev/sda and /dev/sdb as the two working
336 files, you would use filename=/dev/sda:/dev/sdb. On Windows,
337 disk devices are accessed as \\.\PhysicalDrive0 for the first
338 device, \\.\PhysicalDrive1 for the second etc. Note: Windows
339 and FreeBSD prevent write access to areas of the disk
340 containing in-use data (e.g. filesystems).
341 If the wanted filename does need to include a colon, then
342 escape that with a '\' character. For instance, if the filename
343 is "/dev/dsk/foo@3,0:c", then you would use
344 filename="/dev/dsk/foo@3,0\:c". '-' is a reserved name, meaning
345 stdin or stdout. Which of the two depends on the read/write
346 direction set.
347
348filename_format=str
349 If sharing multiple files between jobs, it is usually necessary
350 to have fio generate the exact names that you want. By default,
351 fio will name a file based on the default file format
352 specification of jobname.jobnumber.filenumber. With this
353 option, that can be customized. Fio will recognize and replace
354 the following keywords in this string:
355
356 $jobname
357 The name of the worker thread or process.
358
359 $jobnum
360 The incremental number of the worker thread or
361 process.
362
363 $filenum
364 The incremental number of the file for that worker
365 thread or process.
366
367 To have dependent jobs share a set of files, this option can
368 be set to have fio generate filenames that are shared between
369 the two. For instance, if testfiles.$filenum is specified,
370 file number 4 for any job will be named testfiles.4. The
371 default of $jobname.$jobnum.$filenum will be used if
372 no other format specifier is given.
373
374unique_filename=bool To avoid collisions between networked clients, fio
375 defaults to prefixing any generated filenames (with a directory
376 specified) with the source of the client connecting. To disable
377 this behavior, set this option to 0.
378
379opendir=str Tell fio to recursively add any file it can find in this
380 directory and down the file system tree.
381
382lockfile=str Fio defaults to not locking any files before it does
383 IO to them. If a file or file descriptor is shared, fio
384 can serialize IO to that file to make the end result
385 consistent. This is usual for emulating real workloads that
386 share files. The lock modes are:
387
388 none No locking. The default.
389 exclusive Only one thread/process may do IO,
390 excluding all others.
391 readwrite Read-write locking on the file. Many
392 readers may access the file at the
393 same time, but writes get exclusive
394 access.
395
396readwrite=str
397rw=str Type of io pattern. Accepted values are:
398
399 read Sequential reads
400 write Sequential writes
401 randwrite Random writes
402 randread Random reads
403 rw,readwrite Sequential mixed reads and writes
404 randrw Random mixed reads and writes
405 trimwrite Mixed trims and writes. Blocks will be
406 trimmed first, then written to.
407
408 For the mixed io types, the default is to split them 50/50.
409 For certain types of io the result may still be skewed a bit,
410 since the speed may be different. It is possible to specify
411 a number of IO's to do before getting a new offset, this is
412 done by appending a ':<nr>' to the end of the string given.
413 For a random read, it would look like 'rw=randread:8' for
414 passing in an offset modifier with a value of 8. If the
415 suffix is used with a sequential IO pattern, then the value
416 specified will be added to the generated offset for each IO.
417 For instance, using rw=write:4k will skip 4k for every
418 write. It turns sequential IO into sequential IO with holes.
419 See the 'rw_sequencer' option.
420
421rw_sequencer=str If an offset modifier is given by appending a number to
422 the rw=<str> line, then this option controls how that
423 number modifies the IO offset being generated. Accepted
424 values are:
425
426 sequential Generate sequential offset
427 identical Generate the same offset
428
429 'sequential' is only useful for random IO, where fio would
430 normally generate a new random offset for every IO. If you
431 append eg 8 to randread, you would get a new random offset for
432 every 8 IO's. The result would be a seek for only every 8
433 IO's, instead of for every IO. Use rw=randread:8 to specify
434 that. As sequential IO is already sequential, setting
435 'sequential' for that would not result in any differences.
436 'identical' behaves in a similar fashion, except it sends
437 the same offset 8 number of times before generating a new
438 offset.
439
440kb_base=int The base unit for a kilobyte. The defacto base is 2^10, 1024.
441 Storage manufacturers like to use 10^3 or 1000 as a base
442 ten unit instead, for obvious reasons. Allow values are
443 1024 or 1000, with 1024 being the default.
444
445unified_rw_reporting=bool Fio normally reports statistics on a per
446 data direction basis, meaning that read, write, and trim are
447 accounted and reported separately. If this option is set,
448 the fio will sum the results and report them as "mixed"
449 instead.
450
451randrepeat=bool For random IO workloads, seed the generator in a predictable
452 way so that results are repeatable across repetitions.
453 Defaults to true.
454
455randseed=int Seed the random number generators based on this seed value, to
456 be able to control what sequence of output is being generated.
457 If not set, the random sequence depends on the randrepeat
458 setting.
459
460fallocate=str Whether pre-allocation is performed when laying down files.
461 Accepted values are:
462
463 none Do not pre-allocate space
464 posix Pre-allocate via posix_fallocate()
465 keep Pre-allocate via fallocate() with
466 FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE set
467 0 Backward-compatible alias for 'none'
468 1 Backward-compatible alias for 'posix'
469
470 May not be available on all supported platforms. 'keep' is only
471 available on Linux.If using ZFS on Solaris this must be set to
472 'none' because ZFS doesn't support it. Default: 'posix'.
473
474fadvise_hint=bool By default, fio will use fadvise() to advise the kernel
475 on what IO patterns it is likely to issue. Sometimes you
476 want to test specific IO patterns without telling the
477 kernel about it, in which case you can disable this option.
478 If set, fio will use POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL for sequential
479 IO and POSIX_FADV_RANDOM for random IO.
480
481fadvise_stream=int Notify the kernel what write stream ID to place these
482 writes under. Only supported on Linux. Note, this option
483 may change going forward.
484
485size=int The total size of file io for this job. Fio will run until
486 this many bytes has been transferred, unless runtime is
487 limited by other options (such as 'runtime', for instance,
488 or increased/decreased by 'io_size'). Unless specific nrfiles
489 and filesize options are given, fio will divide this size
490 between the available files specified by the job. If not set,
491 fio will use the full size of the given files or devices.
492 If the files do not exist, size must be given. It is also
493 possible to give size as a percentage between 1 and 100. If
494 size=20% is given, fio will use 20% of the full size of the
495 given files or devices.
496
497io_size=int
498io_limit=int Normally fio operates within the region set by 'size', which
499 means that the 'size' option sets both the region and size of
500 IO to be performed. Sometimes that is not what you want. With
501 this option, it is possible to define just the amount of IO
502 that fio should do. For instance, if 'size' is set to 20G and
503 'io_size' is set to 5G, fio will perform IO within the first
504 20G but exit when 5G have been done. The opposite is also
505 possible - if 'size' is set to 20G, and 'io_size' is set to
506 40G, then fio will do 40G of IO within the 0..20G region.
507
508filesize=int Individual file sizes. May be a range, in which case fio
509 will select sizes for files at random within the given range
510 and limited to 'size' in total (if that is given). If not
511 given, each created file is the same size.
512
513file_append=bool Perform IO after the end of the file. Normally fio will
514 operate within the size of a file. If this option is set, then
515 fio will append to the file instead. This has identical
516 behavior to setting offset to the size of a file. This option
517 is ignored on non-regular files.
518
519fill_device=bool
520fill_fs=bool Sets size to something really large and waits for ENOSPC (no
521 space left on device) as the terminating condition. Only makes
522 sense with sequential write. For a read workload, the mount
523 point will be filled first then IO started on the result. This
524 option doesn't make sense if operating on a raw device node,
525 since the size of that is already known by the file system.
526 Additionally, writing beyond end-of-device will not return
527 ENOSPC there.
528
529blocksize=int
530bs=int The block size used for the io units. Defaults to 4k. Values
531 can be given for both read and writes. If a single int is
532 given, it will apply to both. If a second int is specified
533 after a comma, it will apply to writes only. In other words,
534 the format is either bs=read_and_write or bs=read,write,trim.
535 bs=4k,8k will thus use 4k blocks for reads, 8k blocks for
536 writes, and 8k for trims. You can terminate the list with
537 a trailing comma. bs=4k,8k, would use the default value for
538 trims.. If you only wish to set the write size, you
539 can do so by passing an empty read size - bs=,8k will set
540 8k for writes and leave the read default value.
541
542blockalign=int
543ba=int At what boundary to align random IO offsets. Defaults to
544 the same as 'blocksize' the minimum blocksize given.
545 Minimum alignment is typically 512b for using direct IO,
546 though it usually depends on the hardware block size. This
547 option is mutually exclusive with using a random map for
548 files, so it will turn off that option.
549
550blocksize_range=irange
551bsrange=irange Instead of giving a single block size, specify a range
552 and fio will mix the issued io block sizes. The issued
553 io unit will always be a multiple of the minimum value
554 given (also see bs_unaligned). Applies to both reads and
555 writes, however a second range can be given after a comma.
556 See bs=.
557
558bssplit=str Sometimes you want even finer grained control of the
559 block sizes issued, not just an even split between them.
560 This option allows you to weight various block sizes,
561 so that you are able to define a specific amount of
562 block sizes issued. The format for this option is:
563
564 bssplit=blocksize/percentage:blocksize/percentage
565
566 for as many block sizes as needed. So if you want to define
567 a workload that has 50% 64k blocks, 10% 4k blocks, and
568 40% 32k blocks, you would write:
569
570 bssplit=4k/10:64k/50:32k/40
571
572 Ordering does not matter. If the percentage is left blank,
573 fio will fill in the remaining values evenly. So a bssplit
574 option like this one:
575
576 bssplit=4k/50:1k/:32k/
577
578 would have 50% 4k ios, and 25% 1k and 32k ios. The percentages
579 always add up to 100, if bssplit is given a range that adds
580 up to more, it will error out.
581
582 bssplit also supports giving separate splits to reads and
583 writes. The format is identical to what bs= accepts. You
584 have to separate the read and write parts with a comma. So
585 if you want a workload that has 50% 2k reads and 50% 4k reads,
586 while having 90% 4k writes and 10% 8k writes, you would
587 specify:
588
589 bssplit=2k/50:4k/50,4k/90:8k/10
590
591blocksize_unaligned
592bs_unaligned If this option is given, any byte size value within bsrange
593 may be used as a block range. This typically wont work with
594 direct IO, as that normally requires sector alignment.
595
596bs_is_seq_rand If this option is set, fio will use the normal read,write
597 blocksize settings as sequential,random instead. Any random
598 read or write will use the WRITE blocksize settings, and any
599 sequential read or write will use the READ blocksize setting.
600
601zero_buffers If this option is given, fio will init the IO buffers to
602 all zeroes. The default is to fill them with random data.
603
604refill_buffers If this option is given, fio will refill the IO buffers
605 on every submit. The default is to only fill it at init
606 time and reuse that data. Only makes sense if zero_buffers
607 isn't specified, naturally. If data verification is enabled,
608 refill_buffers is also automatically enabled.
609
610scramble_buffers=bool If refill_buffers is too costly and the target is
611 using data deduplication, then setting this option will
612 slightly modify the IO buffer contents to defeat normal
613 de-dupe attempts. This is not enough to defeat more clever
614 block compression attempts, but it will stop naive dedupe of
615 blocks. Default: true.
616
617buffer_compress_percentage=int If this is set, then fio will attempt to
618 provide IO buffer content (on WRITEs) that compress to
619 the specified level. Fio does this by providing a mix of
620 random data and a fixed pattern. The fixed pattern is either
621 zeroes, or the pattern specified by buffer_pattern. If the
622 pattern option is used, it might skew the compression ratio
623 slightly. Note that this is per block size unit, for file/disk
624 wide compression level that matches this setting, you'll also
625 want to set refill_buffers.
626
627buffer_compress_chunk=int See buffer_compress_percentage. This
628 setting allows fio to manage how big the ranges of random
629 data and zeroed data is. Without this set, fio will
630 provide buffer_compress_percentage of blocksize random
631 data, followed by the remaining zeroed. With this set
632 to some chunk size smaller than the block size, fio can
633 alternate random and zeroed data throughout the IO
634 buffer.
635
636buffer_pattern=str If set, fio will fill the io buffers with this
637 pattern. If not set, the contents of io buffers is defined by
638 the other options related to buffer contents. The setting can
639 be any pattern of bytes, and can be prefixed with 0x for hex
640 values. It may also be a string, where the string must then
641 be wrapped with "", e.g.:
642
643 buffer_pattern="abcd"
644 or
645 buffer_pattern=-12
646 or
647 buffer_pattern=0xdeadface
648
649 Also you can combine everything together in any order:
650 buffer_pattern=0xdeadface"abcd"-12
651
652dedupe_percentage=int If set, fio will generate this percentage of
653 identical buffers when writing. These buffers will be
654 naturally dedupable. The contents of the buffers depend on
655 what other buffer compression settings have been set. It's
656 possible to have the individual buffers either fully
657 compressible, or not at all. This option only controls the
658 distribution of unique buffers.
659
660nrfiles=int Number of files to use for this job. Defaults to 1.
661
662openfiles=int Number of files to keep open at the same time. Defaults to
663 the same as nrfiles, can be set smaller to limit the number
664 simultaneous opens.
665
666file_service_type=str Defines how fio decides which file from a job to
667 service next. The following types are defined:
668
669 random Just choose a file at random.
670
671 roundrobin Round robin over open files. This
672 is the default.
673
674 sequential Finish one file before moving on to
675 the next. Multiple files can still be
676 open depending on 'openfiles'.
677
678 zipf Use a zipfian distribution to decide what file
679 to access.
680
681 pareto Use a pareto distribution to decide what file
682 to access.
683
684 gauss Use a gaussian (normal) distribution to decide
685 what file to access.
686
687 For random, roundrobin, and sequential, a postfix can be
688 appended to tell fio how many I/Os to issue before switching
689 to a new file. For example, specifying
690 'file_service_type=random:8' would cause fio to issue 8 I/Os
691 before selecting a new file at random. For the non-uniform
692 distributions, a floating point postfix can be given to
693 influence how the distribution is skewed. See
694 'random_distribution' for a description of how that would work.
695
696ioengine=str Defines how the job issues io to the file. The following
697 types are defined:
698
699 sync Basic read(2) or write(2) io. lseek(2) is
700 used to position the io location.
701
702 psync Basic pread(2) or pwrite(2) io.
703
704 vsync Basic readv(2) or writev(2) IO.
705
706 pvsync Basic preadv(2) or pwritev(2) IO.
707
708 pvsync2 Basic preadv2(2) or pwritev2(2) IO.
709
710 libaio Linux native asynchronous io. Note that Linux
711 may only support queued behaviour with
712 non-buffered IO (set direct=1 or buffered=0).
713 This engine defines engine specific options.
714
715 posixaio glibc posix asynchronous io.
716
717 solarisaio Solaris native asynchronous io.
718
719 windowsaio Windows native asynchronous io.
720
721 mmap File is memory mapped and data copied
722 to/from using memcpy(3).
723
724 splice splice(2) is used to transfer the data and
725 vmsplice(2) to transfer data from user
726 space to the kernel.
727
728 sg SCSI generic sg v3 io. May either be
729 synchronous using the SG_IO ioctl, or if
730 the target is an sg character device
731 we use read(2) and write(2) for asynchronous
732 io.
733
734 null Doesn't transfer any data, just pretends
735 to. This is mainly used to exercise fio
736 itself and for debugging/testing purposes.
737
738 net Transfer over the network to given host:port.
739 Depending on the protocol used, the hostname,
740 port, listen and filename options are used to
741 specify what sort of connection to make, while
742 the protocol option determines which protocol
743 will be used.
744 This engine defines engine specific options.
745
746 netsplice Like net, but uses splice/vmsplice to
747 map data and send/receive.
748 This engine defines engine specific options.
749
750 cpuio Doesn't transfer any data, but burns CPU
751 cycles according to the cpuload= and
752 cpuchunks= options. Setting cpuload=85
753 will cause that job to do nothing but burn
754 85% of the CPU. In case of SMP machines,
755 use numjobs=<no_of_cpu> to get desired CPU
756 usage, as the cpuload only loads a single
757 CPU at the desired rate.
758
759 guasi The GUASI IO engine is the Generic Userspace
760 Asyncronous Syscall Interface approach
761 to async IO. See
762
763 http://www.xmailserver.org/guasi-lib.html
764
765 for more info on GUASI.
766
767 rdma The RDMA I/O engine supports both RDMA
768 memory semantics (RDMA_WRITE/RDMA_READ) and
769 channel semantics (Send/Recv) for the
770 InfiniBand, RoCE and iWARP protocols.
771
772 falloc IO engine that does regular fallocate to
773 simulate data transfer as fio ioengine.
774 DDIR_READ does fallocate(,mode = keep_size,)
775 DDIR_WRITE does fallocate(,mode = 0)
776 DDIR_TRIM does fallocate(,mode = punch_hole)
777
778 e4defrag IO engine that does regular EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT
779 ioctls to simulate defragment activity in
780 request to DDIR_WRITE event
781
782 rbd IO engine supporting direct access to Ceph
783 Rados Block Devices (RBD) via librbd without
784 the need to use the kernel rbd driver. This
785 ioengine defines engine specific options.
786
787 gfapi Using Glusterfs libgfapi sync interface to
788 direct access to Glusterfs volumes without
789 options.
790
791 gfapi_async Using Glusterfs libgfapi async interface
792 to direct access to Glusterfs volumes without
793 having to go through FUSE. This ioengine
794 defines engine specific options.
795
796 libhdfs Read and write through Hadoop (HDFS).
797 This engine interprets offsets a little
798 differently. In HDFS, files once created
799 cannot be modified. So random writes are not
800 possible. To imitate this, libhdfs engine
801 creates bunch of small files, and engine will
802 pick a file out of those files based on the
803 offset enerated by fio backend. Each jobs uses
804 it's own connection to HDFS.
805
806 mtd Read, write and erase an MTD character device
807 (e.g., /dev/mtd0). Discards are treated as
808 erases. Depending on the underlying device
809 type, the I/O may have to go in a certain
810 pattern, e.g., on NAND, writing sequentially
811 to erase blocks and discarding before
812 overwriting. The writetrim mode works well
813 for this constraint.
814
815 pmemblk Read and write through the NVML libpmemblk
816 interface.
817
818 external Prefix to specify loading an external
819 IO engine object file. Append the engine
820 filename, eg ioengine=external:/tmp/foo.o
821 to load ioengine foo.o in /tmp.
822
823iodepth=int This defines how many io units to keep in flight against
824 the file. The default is 1 for each file defined in this
825 job, can be overridden with a larger value for higher
826 concurrency. Note that increasing iodepth beyond 1 will not
827 affect synchronous ioengines (except for small degress when
828 verify_async is in use). Even async engines may impose OS
829 restrictions causing the desired depth not to be achieved.
830 This may happen on Linux when using libaio and not setting
831 direct=1, since buffered IO is not async on that OS. Keep an
832 eye on the IO depth distribution in the fio output to verify
833 that the achieved depth is as expected. Default: 1.
834
835iodepth_batch_submit=int
836iodepth_batch=int This defines how many pieces of IO to submit at once.
837 It defaults to 1 which means that we submit each IO
838 as soon as it is available, but can be raised to submit
839 bigger batches of IO at the time. If it is set to 0 the iodepth
840 value will be used.
841
842iodepth_batch_complete_min=int
843iodepth_batch_complete=int This defines how many pieces of IO to retrieve
844 at once. It defaults to 1 which means that we'll ask
845 for a minimum of 1 IO in the retrieval process from
846 the kernel. The IO retrieval will go on until we
847 hit the limit set by iodepth_low. If this variable is
848 set to 0, then fio will always check for completed
849 events before queuing more IO. This helps reduce
850 IO latency, at the cost of more retrieval system calls.
851
852iodepth_batch_complete_max=int This defines maximum pieces of IO to
853 retrieve at once. This variable should be used along with
854 iodepth_batch_complete_min=int variable, specifying the range
855 of min and max amount of IO which should be retrieved. By default
856 it is equal to iodepth_batch_complete_min value.
857
858 Example #1:
859
860 iodepth_batch_complete_min=1
861 iodepth_batch_complete_max=<iodepth>
862
863 which means that we will retrieve at leat 1 IO and up to the
864 whole submitted queue depth. If none of IO has been completed
865 yet, we will wait.
866
867 Example #2:
868
869 iodepth_batch_complete_min=0
870 iodepth_batch_complete_max=<iodepth>
871
872 which means that we can retrieve up to the whole submitted
873 queue depth, but if none of IO has been completed yet, we will
874 NOT wait and immediately exit the system call. In this example
875 we simply do polling.
876
877iodepth_low=int The low water mark indicating when to start filling
878 the queue again. Defaults to the same as iodepth, meaning
879 that fio will attempt to keep the queue full at all times.
880 If iodepth is set to eg 16 and iodepth_low is set to 4, then
881 after fio has filled the queue of 16 requests, it will let
882 the depth drain down to 4 before starting to fill it again.
883
884io_submit_mode=str This option controls how fio submits the IO to
885 the IO engine. The default is 'inline', which means that the
886 fio job threads submit and reap IO directly. If set to
887 'offload', the job threads will offload IO submission to a
888 dedicated pool of IO threads. This requires some coordination
889 and thus has a bit of extra overhead, especially for lower
890 queue depth IO where it can increase latencies. The benefit
891 is that fio can manage submission rates independently of
892 the device completion rates. This avoids skewed latency
893 reporting if IO gets back up on the device side (the
894 coordinated omission problem).
895
896direct=bool If value is true, use non-buffered io. This is usually
897 O_DIRECT. Note that ZFS on Solaris doesn't support direct io.
898 On Windows the synchronous ioengines don't support direct io.
899
900atomic=bool If value is true, attempt to use atomic direct IO. Atomic
901 writes are guaranteed to be stable once acknowledged by
902 the operating system. Only Linux supports O_ATOMIC right
903 now.
904
905buffered=bool If value is true, use buffered io. This is the opposite
906 of the 'direct' option. Defaults to true.
907
908offset=int Start io at the given offset in the file. The data before
909 the given offset will not be touched. This effectively
910 caps the file size at real_size - offset.
911
912offset_increment=int If this is provided, then the real offset becomes
913 offset + offset_increment * thread_number, where the thread
914 number is a counter that starts at 0 and is incremented for
915 each sub-job (i.e. when numjobs option is specified). This
916 option is useful if there are several jobs which are intended
917 to operate on a file in parallel disjoint segments, with
918 even spacing between the starting points.
919
920number_ios=int Fio will normally perform IOs until it has exhausted the size
921 of the region set by size=, or if it exhaust the allocated
922 time (or hits an error condition). With this setting, the
923 range/size can be set independently of the number of IOs to
924 perform. When fio reaches this number, it will exit normally
925 and report status. Note that this does not extend the amount
926 of IO that will be done, it will only stop fio if this
927 condition is met before other end-of-job criteria.
928
929fsync=int If writing to a file, issue a sync of the dirty data
930 for every number of blocks given. For example, if you give
931 32 as a parameter, fio will sync the file for every 32
932 writes issued. If fio is using non-buffered io, we may
933 not sync the file. The exception is the sg io engine, which
934 synchronizes the disk cache anyway.
935
936fdatasync=int Like fsync= but uses fdatasync() to only sync data and not
937 metadata blocks.
938 In FreeBSD and Windows there is no fdatasync(), this falls back
939 to using fsync()
940
941sync_file_range=str:val Use sync_file_range() for every 'val' number of
942 write operations. Fio will track range of writes that
943 have happened since the last sync_file_range() call. 'str'
944 can currently be one or more of:
945
946 wait_before SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE
947 write SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE
948 wait_after SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_AFTER
949
950 So if you do sync_file_range=wait_before,write:8, fio would
951 use SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE | SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE for
952 every 8 writes. Also see the sync_file_range(2) man page.
953 This option is Linux specific.
954
955overwrite=bool If true, writes to a file will always overwrite existing
956 data. If the file doesn't already exist, it will be
957 created before the write phase begins. If the file exists
958 and is large enough for the specified write phase, nothing
959 will be done.
960
961end_fsync=bool If true, fsync file contents when a write stage has completed.
962
963fsync_on_close=bool If true, fio will fsync() a dirty file on close.
964 This differs from end_fsync in that it will happen on every
965 file close, not just at the end of the job.
966
967rwmixread=int How large a percentage of the mix should be reads.
968
969rwmixwrite=int How large a percentage of the mix should be writes. If both
970 rwmixread and rwmixwrite is given and the values do not add
971 up to 100%, the latter of the two will be used to override
972 the first. This may interfere with a given rate setting,
973 if fio is asked to limit reads or writes to a certain rate.
974 If that is the case, then the distribution may be skewed.
975
976random_distribution=str:float By default, fio will use a completely uniform
977 random distribution when asked to perform random IO. Sometimes
978 it is useful to skew the distribution in specific ways,
979 ensuring that some parts of the data is more hot than others.
980 fio includes the following distribution models:
981
982 random Uniform random distribution
983 zipf Zipf distribution
984 pareto Pareto distribution
985 gauss Normal (guassian) distribution
986 zoned Zoned random distribution
987
988 When using a zipf or pareto distribution, an input value
989 is also needed to define the access pattern. For zipf, this
990 is the zipf theta. For pareto, it's the pareto power. Fio
991 includes a test program, genzipf, that can be used visualize
992 what the given input values will yield in terms of hit rates.
993 If you wanted to use zipf with a theta of 1.2, you would use
994 random_distribution=zipf:1.2 as the option. If a non-uniform
995 model is used, fio will disable use of the random map. For
996 the gauss distribution, a normal deviation is supplied as
997 a value between 0 and 100.
998
999 For a zoned distribution, fio supports specifying percentages
1000 of IO access that should fall within what range of the file or
1001 device. For example, given a criteria of:
1002
1003 60% of accesses should be to the first 10%
1004 30% of accesses should be to the next 20%
1005 8% of accesses should be to to the next 30%
1006 2% of accesses should be to the next 40%
1007
1008 we can define that through zoning of the random accesses. For
1009 the above example, the user would do:
1010
1011 random_distribution=zoned:60/10:30/20:8/30:2/40
1012
1013 similarly to how bssplit works for setting ranges and
1014 percentages of block sizes. Like bssplit, it's possible to
1015 specify separate zones for reads, writes, and trims. If just
1016 one set is given, it'll apply to all of them.
1017
1018percentage_random=int For a random workload, set how big a percentage should
1019 be random. This defaults to 100%, in which case the workload
1020 is fully random. It can be set from anywhere from 0 to 100.
1021 Setting it to 0 would make the workload fully sequential. Any
1022 setting in between will result in a random mix of sequential
1023 and random IO, at the given percentages. It is possible to
1024 set different values for reads, writes, and trim. To do so,
1025 simply use a comma separated list. See blocksize.
1026
1027norandommap Normally fio will cover every block of the file when doing
1028 random IO. If this option is given, fio will just get a
1029 new random offset without looking at past io history. This
1030 means that some blocks may not be read or written, and that
1031 some blocks may be read/written more than once. If this option
1032 is used with verify= and multiple blocksizes (via bsrange=),
1033 only intact blocks are verified, i.e., partially-overwritten
1034 blocks are ignored.
1035
1036softrandommap=bool See norandommap. If fio runs with the random block map
1037 enabled and it fails to allocate the map, if this option is
1038 set it will continue without a random block map. As coverage
1039 will not be as complete as with random maps, this option is
1040 disabled by default.
1041
1042random_generator=str Fio supports the following engines for generating
1043 IO offsets for random IO:
1044
1045 tausworthe Strong 2^88 cycle random number generator
1046 lfsr Linear feedback shift register generator
1047 tausworthe64 Strong 64-bit 2^258 cycle random number
1048 generator
1049
1050 Tausworthe is a strong random number generator, but it
1051 requires tracking on the side if we want to ensure that
1052 blocks are only read or written once. LFSR guarantees
1053 that we never generate the same offset twice, and it's
1054 also less computationally expensive. It's not a true
1055 random generator, however, though for IO purposes it's
1056 typically good enough. LFSR only works with single
1057 block sizes, not with workloads that use multiple block
1058 sizes. If used with such a workload, fio may read or write
1059 some blocks multiple times. The default value is tausworthe,
1060 unless the required space exceeds 2^32 blocks. If it does,
1061 then tausworthe64 is selected automatically.
1062
1063nice=int Run the job with the given nice value. See man nice(2).
1064
1065prio=int Set the io priority value of this job. Linux limits us to
1066 a positive value between 0 and 7, with 0 being the highest.
1067 See man ionice(1). Refer to an appropriate manpage for
1068 other operating systems since meaning of priority may differ.
1069
1070prioclass=int Set the io priority class. See man ionice(1).
1071
1072thinktime=int Stall the job x microseconds after an io has completed before
1073 issuing the next. May be used to simulate processing being
1074 done by an application. See thinktime_blocks and
1075 thinktime_spin.
1076
1077thinktime_spin=int
1078 Only valid if thinktime is set - pretend to spend CPU time
1079 doing something with the data received, before falling back
1080 to sleeping for the rest of the period specified by
1081 thinktime.
1082
1083thinktime_blocks=int
1084 Only valid if thinktime is set - control how many blocks
1085 to issue, before waiting 'thinktime' usecs. If not set,
1086 defaults to 1 which will make fio wait 'thinktime' usecs
1087 after every block. This effectively makes any queue depth
1088 setting redundant, since no more than 1 IO will be queued
1089 before we have to complete it and do our thinktime. In
1090 other words, this setting effectively caps the queue depth
1091 if the latter is larger.
1092
1093rate=int Cap the bandwidth used by this job. The number is in bytes/sec,
1094 the normal suffix rules apply. You can use rate=500k to limit
1095 reads and writes to 500k each, or you can specify read and
1096 writes separately. Using rate=1m,500k would limit reads to
1097 1MB/sec and writes to 500KB/sec. Capping only reads or
1098 writes can be done with rate=,500k or rate=500k,. The former
1099 will only limit writes (to 500KB/sec), the latter will only
1100 limit reads.
1101
1102rate_min=int Tell fio to do whatever it can to maintain at least this
1103 bandwidth. Failing to meet this requirement, will cause
1104 the job to exit. The same format as rate is used for
1105 read vs write separation.
1106
1107rate_iops=int Cap the bandwidth to this number of IOPS. Basically the same
1108 as rate, just specified independently of bandwidth. If the
1109 job is given a block size range instead of a fixed value,
1110 the smallest block size is used as the metric. The same format
1111 as rate is used for read vs write separation.
1112
1113rate_iops_min=int If fio doesn't meet this rate of IO, it will cause
1114 the job to exit. The same format as rate is used for read vs
1115 write separation.
1116
1117rate_process=str This option controls how fio manages rated IO
1118 submissions. The default is 'linear', which submits IO in a
1119 linear fashion with fixed delays between IOs that gets
1120 adjusted based on IO completion rates. If this is set to
1121 'poisson', fio will submit IO based on a more real world
1122 random request flow, known as the Poisson process
1123 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisson_process). The lambda
1124 will be 10^6 / IOPS for the given workload.
1125
1126latency_target=int If set, fio will attempt to find the max performance
1127 point that the given workload will run at while maintaining a
1128 latency below this target. The values is given in microseconds.
1129 See latency_window and latency_percentile
1130
1131latency_window=int Used with latency_target to specify the sample window
1132 that the job is run at varying queue depths to test the
1133 performance. The value is given in microseconds.
1134
1135latency_percentile=float The percentage of IOs that must fall within the
1136 criteria specified by latency_target and latency_window. If not
1137 set, this defaults to 100.0, meaning that all IOs must be equal
1138 or below to the value set by latency_target.
1139
1140max_latency=int If set, fio will exit the job if it exceeds this maximum
1141 latency. It will exit with an ETIME error.
1142
1143rate_cycle=int Average bandwidth for 'rate' and 'rate_min' over this number
1144 of milliseconds.
1145
1146cpumask=int Set the CPU affinity of this job. The parameter given is a
1147 bitmask of allowed CPU's the job may run on. So if you want
1148 the allowed CPUs to be 1 and 5, you would pass the decimal
1149 value of (1 << 1 | 1 << 5), or 34. See man
1150 sched_setaffinity(2). This may not work on all supported
1151 operating systems or kernel versions. This option doesn't
1152 work well for a higher CPU count than what you can store in
1153 an integer mask, so it can only control cpus 1-32. For
1154 boxes with larger CPU counts, use cpus_allowed.
1155
1156cpus_allowed=str Controls the same options as cpumask, but it allows a text
1157 setting of the permitted CPUs instead. So to use CPUs 1 and
1158 5, you would specify cpus_allowed=1,5. This options also
1159 allows a range of CPUs. Say you wanted a binding to CPUs
1160 1, 5, and 8-15, you would set cpus_allowed=1,5,8-15.
1161
1162cpus_allowed_policy=str Set the policy of how fio distributes the CPUs
1163 specified by cpus_allowed or cpumask. Two policies are
1164 supported:
1165
1166 shared All jobs will share the CPU set specified.
1167 split Each job will get a unique CPU from the CPU set.
1168
1169 'shared' is the default behaviour, if the option isn't
1170 specified. If split is specified, then fio will will assign
1171 one cpu per job. If not enough CPUs are given for the jobs
1172 listed, then fio will roundrobin the CPUs in the set.
1173
1174numa_cpu_nodes=str Set this job running on spcified NUMA nodes' CPUs. The
1175 arguments allow comma delimited list of cpu numbers,
1176 A-B ranges, or 'all'. Note, to enable numa options support,
1177 fio must be built on a system with libnuma-dev(el) installed.
1178
1179numa_mem_policy=str Set this job's memory policy and corresponding NUMA
1180 nodes. Format of the argements:
1181 <mode>[:<nodelist>]
1182 `mode' is one of the following memory policy:
1183 default, prefer, bind, interleave, local
1184 For `default' and `local' memory policy, no node is
1185 needed to be specified.
1186 For `prefer', only one node is allowed.
1187 For `bind' and `interleave', it allow comma delimited
1188 list of numbers, A-B ranges, or 'all'.
1189
1190startdelay=time Start this job the specified number of seconds after fio
1191 has started. Only useful if the job file contains several
1192 jobs, and you want to delay starting some jobs to a certain
1193 time.
1194
1195runtime=time Tell fio to terminate processing after the specified number
1196 of seconds. It can be quite hard to determine for how long
1197 a specified job will run, so this parameter is handy to
1198 cap the total runtime to a given time.
1199
1200time_based If set, fio will run for the duration of the runtime
1201 specified even if the file(s) are completely read or
1202 written. It will simply loop over the same workload
1203 as many times as the runtime allows.
1204
1205ramp_time=time If set, fio will run the specified workload for this amount
1206 of time before logging any performance numbers. Useful for
1207 letting performance settle before logging results, thus
1208 minimizing the runtime required for stable results. Note
1209 that the ramp_time is considered lead in time for a job,
1210 thus it will increase the total runtime if a special timeout
1211 or runtime is specified.
1212
1213invalidate=bool Invalidate the buffer/page cache parts for this file prior
1214 to starting io. Defaults to true.
1215
1216sync=bool Use sync io for buffered writes. For the majority of the
1217 io engines, this means using O_SYNC.
1218
1219iomem=str
1220mem=str Fio can use various types of memory as the io unit buffer.
1221 The allowed values are:
1222
1223 malloc Use memory from malloc(3) as the buffers.
1224
1225 shm Use shared memory as the buffers. Allocated
1226 through shmget(2).
1227
1228 shmhuge Same as shm, but use huge pages as backing.
1229
1230 mmap Use mmap to allocate buffers. May either be
1231 anonymous memory, or can be file backed if
1232 a filename is given after the option. The
1233 format is mem=mmap:/path/to/file.
1234
1235 mmaphuge Use a memory mapped huge file as the buffer
1236 backing. Append filename after mmaphuge, ala
1237 mem=mmaphuge:/hugetlbfs/file
1238
1239 mmapshared Same as mmap, but use a MMAP_SHARED
1240 mapping.
1241
1242 The area allocated is a function of the maximum allowed
1243 bs size for the job, multiplied by the io depth given. Note
1244 that for shmhuge and mmaphuge to work, the system must have
1245 free huge pages allocated. This can normally be checked
1246 and set by reading/writing /proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages on a
1247 Linux system. Fio assumes a huge page is 4MB in size. So
1248 to calculate the number of huge pages you need for a given
1249 job file, add up the io depth of all jobs (normally one unless
1250 iodepth= is used) and multiply by the maximum bs set. Then
1251 divide that number by the huge page size. You can see the
1252 size of the huge pages in /proc/meminfo. If no huge pages
1253 are allocated by having a non-zero number in nr_hugepages,
1254 using mmaphuge or shmhuge will fail. Also see hugepage-size.
1255
1256 mmaphuge also needs to have hugetlbfs mounted and the file
1257 location should point there. So if it's mounted in /huge,
1258 you would use mem=mmaphuge:/huge/somefile.
1259
1260iomem_align=int This indiciates the memory alignment of the IO memory buffers.
1261 Note that the given alignment is applied to the first IO unit
1262 buffer, if using iodepth the alignment of the following buffers
1263 are given by the bs used. In other words, if using a bs that is
1264 a multiple of the page sized in the system, all buffers will
1265 be aligned to this value. If using a bs that is not page
1266 aligned, the alignment of subsequent IO memory buffers is the
1267 sum of the iomem_align and bs used.
1268
1269hugepage-size=int
1270 Defines the size of a huge page. Must at least be equal
1271 to the system setting, see /proc/meminfo. Defaults to 4MB.
1272 Should probably always be a multiple of megabytes, so using
1273 hugepage-size=Xm is the preferred way to set this to avoid
1274 setting a non-pow-2 bad value.
1275
1276exitall When one job finishes, terminate the rest. The default is
1277 to wait for each job to finish, sometimes that is not the
1278 desired action.
1279
1280exitall_on_error When one job finishes in error, terminate the rest. The
1281 default is to wait for each job to finish.
1282
1283bwavgtime=int Average the calculated bandwidth over the given time. Value
1284 is specified in milliseconds. If the job also does bandwidth
1285 logging through 'write_bw_log', then the minimum of this option
1286 and 'log_avg_msec' will be used. Default: 500ms.
1287
1288iopsavgtime=int Average the calculated IOPS over the given time. Value
1289 is specified in milliseconds. If the job also does IOPS logging
1290 through 'write_iops_log', then the minimum of this option and
1291 'log_avg_msec' will be used. Default: 500ms.
1292
1293create_serialize=bool If true, serialize the file creating for the jobs.
1294 This may be handy to avoid interleaving of data
1295 files, which may greatly depend on the filesystem
1296 used and even the number of processors in the system.
1297
1298create_fsync=bool fsync the data file after creation. This is the
1299 default.
1300
1301create_on_open=bool Don't pre-setup the files for IO, just create open()
1302 when it's time to do IO to that file.
1303
1304create_only=bool If true, fio will only run the setup phase of the job.
1305 If files need to be laid out or updated on disk, only
1306 that will be done. The actual job contents are not
1307 executed.
1308
1309allow_file_create=bool If true, fio is permitted to create files as part
1310 of its workload. This is the default behavior. If this
1311 option is false, then fio will error out if the files it
1312 needs to use don't already exist. Default: true.
1313
1314allow_mounted_write=bool If this isn't set, fio will abort jobs that
1315 are destructive (eg that write) to what appears to be a
1316 mounted device or partition. This should help catch creating
1317 inadvertently destructive tests, not realizing that the test
1318 will destroy data on the mounted file system. Default: false.
1319
1320pre_read=bool If this is given, files will be pre-read into memory before
1321 starting the given IO operation. This will also clear
1322 the 'invalidate' flag, since it is pointless to pre-read
1323 and then drop the cache. This will only work for IO engines
1324 that are seekable, since they allow you to read the same data
1325 multiple times. Thus it will not work on eg network or splice
1326 IO.
1327
1328unlink=bool Unlink the job files when done. Not the default, as repeated
1329 runs of that job would then waste time recreating the file
1330 set again and again.
1331
1332loops=int Run the specified number of iterations of this job. Used
1333 to repeat the same workload a given number of times. Defaults
1334 to 1.
1335
1336verify_only Do not perform specified workload---only verify data still
1337 matches previous invocation of this workload. This option
1338 allows one to check data multiple times at a later date
1339 without overwriting it. This option makes sense only for
1340 workloads that write data, and does not support workloads
1341 with the time_based option set.
1342
1343do_verify=bool Run the verify phase after a write phase. Only makes sense if
1344 verify is set. Defaults to 1.
1345
1346verify=str If writing to a file, fio can verify the file contents
1347 after each iteration of the job. Each verification method also implies
1348 verification of special header, which is written to the beginning of
1349 each block. This header also includes meta information, like offset
1350 of the block, block number, timestamp when block was written, etc.
1351 verify=str can be combined with verify_pattern=str option.
1352 The allowed values are:
1353
1354 md5 Use an md5 sum of the data area and store
1355 it in the header of each block.
1356
1357 crc64 Use an experimental crc64 sum of the data
1358 area and store it in the header of each
1359 block.
1360
1361 crc32c Use a crc32c sum of the data area and store
1362 it in the header of each block.
1363
1364 crc32c-intel Use hardware assisted crc32c calcuation
1365 provided on SSE4.2 enabled processors. Falls
1366 back to regular software crc32c, if not
1367 supported by the system.
1368
1369 crc32 Use a crc32 sum of the data area and store
1370 it in the header of each block.
1371
1372 crc16 Use a crc16 sum of the data area and store
1373 it in the header of each block.
1374
1375 crc7 Use a crc7 sum of the data area and store
1376 it in the header of each block.
1377
1378 xxhash Use xxhash as the checksum function. Generally
1379 the fastest software checksum that fio
1380 supports.
1381
1382 sha512 Use sha512 as the checksum function.
1383
1384 sha256 Use sha256 as the checksum function.
1385
1386 sha1 Use optimized sha1 as the checksum function.
1387
1388 meta This option is deprecated, since now meta information is
1389 included in generic verification header and meta verification
1390 happens by default. For detailed information see the description
1391 of the verify=str setting. This option is kept because of
1392 compatibility's sake with old configurations. Do not use it.
1393
1394 pattern Verify a strict pattern. Normally fio includes
1395 a header with some basic information and
1396 checksumming, but if this option is set, only
1397 the specific pattern set with 'verify_pattern'
1398 is verified.
1399
1400 null Only pretend to verify. Useful for testing
1401 internals with ioengine=null, not for much
1402 else.
1403
1404 This option can be used for repeated burn-in tests of a
1405 system to make sure that the written data is also
1406 correctly read back. If the data direction given is
1407 a read or random read, fio will assume that it should
1408 verify a previously written file. If the data direction
1409 includes any form of write, the verify will be of the
1410 newly written data.
1411
1412verifysort=bool If set, fio will sort written verify blocks when it deems
1413 it faster to read them back in a sorted manner. This is
1414 often the case when overwriting an existing file, since
1415 the blocks are already laid out in the file system. You
1416 can ignore this option unless doing huge amounts of really
1417 fast IO where the red-black tree sorting CPU time becomes
1418 significant.
1419
1420verify_offset=int Swap the verification header with data somewhere else
1421 in the block before writing. Its swapped back before
1422 verifying.
1423
1424verify_interval=int Write the verification header at a finer granularity
1425 than the blocksize. It will be written for chunks the
1426 size of header_interval. blocksize should divide this
1427 evenly.
1428
1429verify_pattern=str If set, fio will fill the io buffers with this
1430 pattern. Fio defaults to filling with totally random
1431 bytes, but sometimes it's interesting to fill with a known
1432 pattern for io verification purposes. Depending on the
1433 width of the pattern, fio will fill 1/2/3/4 bytes of the
1434 buffer at the time(it can be either a decimal or a hex number).
1435 The verify_pattern if larger than a 32-bit quantity has to
1436 be a hex number that starts with either "0x" or "0X". Use
1437 with verify=str. Also, verify_pattern supports %o format,
1438 which means that for each block offset will be written and
1439 then verifyied back, e.g.:
1440
1441 verify_pattern=%o
1442
1443 Or use combination of everything:
1444 verify_pattern=0xff%o"abcd"-12
1445
1446verify_fatal=bool Normally fio will keep checking the entire contents
1447 before quitting on a block verification failure. If this
1448 option is set, fio will exit the job on the first observed
1449 failure.
1450
1451verify_dump=bool If set, dump the contents of both the original data
1452 block and the data block we read off disk to files. This
1453 allows later analysis to inspect just what kind of data
1454 corruption occurred. Off by default.
1455
1456verify_async=int Fio will normally verify IO inline from the submitting
1457 thread. This option takes an integer describing how many
1458 async offload threads to create for IO verification instead,
1459 causing fio to offload the duty of verifying IO contents
1460 to one or more separate threads. If using this offload
1461 option, even sync IO engines can benefit from using an
1462 iodepth setting higher than 1, as it allows them to have
1463 IO in flight while verifies are running.
1464
1465verify_async_cpus=str Tell fio to set the given CPU affinity on the
1466 async IO verification threads. See cpus_allowed for the
1467 format used.
1468
1469verify_backlog=int Fio will normally verify the written contents of a
1470 job that utilizes verify once that job has completed. In
1471 other words, everything is written then everything is read
1472 back and verified. You may want to verify continually
1473 instead for a variety of reasons. Fio stores the meta data
1474 associated with an IO block in memory, so for large
1475 verify workloads, quite a bit of memory would be used up
1476 holding this meta data. If this option is enabled, fio
1477 will write only N blocks before verifying these blocks.
1478
1479verify_backlog_batch=int Control how many blocks fio will verify
1480 if verify_backlog is set. If not set, will default to
1481 the value of verify_backlog (meaning the entire queue
1482 is read back and verified). If verify_backlog_batch is
1483 less than verify_backlog then not all blocks will be verified,
1484 if verify_backlog_batch is larger than verify_backlog, some
1485 blocks will be verified more than once.
1486
1487verify_state_save=bool When a job exits during the write phase of a verify
1488 workload, save its current state. This allows fio to replay
1489 up until that point, if the verify state is loaded for the
1490 verify read phase. The format of the filename is, roughly,
1491 <type>-<jobname>-<jobindex>-verify.state. <type> is "local"
1492 for a local run, "sock" for a client/server socket connection,
1493 and "ip" (192.168.0.1, for instance) for a networked
1494 client/server connection.
1495
1496verify_state_load=bool If a verify termination trigger was used, fio stores
1497 the current write state of each thread. This can be used at
1498 verification time so that fio knows how far it should verify.
1499 Without this information, fio will run a full verification
1500 pass, according to the settings in the job file used.
1501
1502stonewall
1503wait_for_previous Wait for preceding jobs in the job file to exit, before
1504 starting this one. Can be used to insert serialization
1505 points in the job file. A stone wall also implies starting
1506 a new reporting group.
1507
1508new_group Start a new reporting group. See: group_reporting.
1509
1510numjobs=int Create the specified number of clones of this job. May be
1511 used to setup a larger number of threads/processes doing
1512 the same thing. Each thread is reported separately; to see
1513 statistics for all clones as a whole, use group_reporting in
1514 conjunction with new_group.
1515
1516group_reporting It may sometimes be interesting to display statistics for
1517 groups of jobs as a whole instead of for each individual job.
1518 This is especially true if 'numjobs' is used; looking at
1519 individual thread/process output quickly becomes unwieldy.
1520 To see the final report per-group instead of per-job, use
1521 'group_reporting'. Jobs in a file will be part of the same
1522 reporting group, unless if separated by a stonewall, or by
1523 using 'new_group'.
1524
1525thread fio defaults to forking jobs, however if this option is
1526 given, fio will use pthread_create(3) to create threads
1527 instead.
1528
1529zonesize=int Divide a file into zones of the specified size. See zoneskip.
1530
1531zoneskip=int Skip the specified number of bytes when zonesize data has
1532 been read. The two zone options can be used to only do
1533 io on zones of a file.
1534
1535write_iolog=str Write the issued io patterns to the specified file. See
1536 read_iolog. Specify a separate file for each job, otherwise
1537 the iologs will be interspersed and the file may be corrupt.
1538
1539read_iolog=str Open an iolog with the specified file name and replay the
1540 io patterns it contains. This can be used to store a
1541 workload and replay it sometime later. The iolog given
1542 may also be a blktrace binary file, which allows fio
1543 to replay a workload captured by blktrace. See blktrace
1544 for how to capture such logging data. For blktrace replay,
1545 the file needs to be turned into a blkparse binary data
1546 file first (blkparse <device> -o /dev/null -d file_for_fio.bin).
1547
1548replay_no_stall=int When replaying I/O with read_iolog the default behavior
1549 is to attempt to respect the time stamps within the log and
1550 replay them with the appropriate delay between IOPS. By
1551 setting this variable fio will not respect the timestamps and
1552 attempt to replay them as fast as possible while still
1553 respecting ordering. The result is the same I/O pattern to a
1554 given device, but different timings.
1555
1556replay_redirect=str While replaying I/O patterns using read_iolog the
1557 default behavior is to replay the IOPS onto the major/minor
1558 device that each IOP was recorded from. This is sometimes
1559 undesirable because on a different machine those major/minor
1560 numbers can map to a different device. Changing hardware on
1561 the same system can also result in a different major/minor
1562 mapping. Replay_redirect causes all IOPS to be replayed onto
1563 the single specified device regardless of the device it was
1564 recorded from. i.e. replay_redirect=/dev/sdc would cause all
1565 IO in the blktrace to be replayed onto /dev/sdc. This means
1566 multiple devices will be replayed onto a single, if the trace
1567 contains multiple devices. If you want multiple devices to be
1568 replayed concurrently to multiple redirected devices you must
1569 blkparse your trace into separate traces and replay them with
1570 independent fio invocations. Unfortuantely this also breaks
1571 the strict time ordering between multiple device accesses.
1572
1573replay_align=int Force alignment of IO offsets and lengths in a trace
1574 to this power of 2 value.
1575
1576replay_scale=int Scale sector offsets down by this factor when
1577 replaying traces.
1578
1579per_job_logs=bool If set, this generates bw/clat/iops log with per
1580 file private filenames. If not set, jobs with identical names
1581 will share the log filename. Default: true.
1582
1583write_bw_log=str If given, write a bandwidth log of the jobs in this job
1584 file. Can be used to store data of the bandwidth of the
1585 jobs in their lifetime. The included fio_generate_plots
1586 script uses gnuplot to turn these text files into nice
1587 graphs. See write_lat_log for behaviour of given
1588 filename. For this option, the suffix is _bw.x.log, where
1589 x is the index of the job (1..N, where N is the number of
1590 jobs). If 'per_job_logs' is false, then the filename will not
1591 include the job index. See 'Log File Formats'.
1592
1593write_lat_log=str Same as write_bw_log, except that this option stores io
1594 submission, completion, and total latencies instead. If no
1595 filename is given with this option, the default filename of
1596 "jobname_type.log" is used. Even if the filename is given,
1597 fio will still append the type of log. So if one specifies
1598
1599 write_lat_log=foo
1600
1601 The actual log names will be foo_slat.x.log, foo_clat.x.log,
1602 and foo_lat.x.log, where x is the index of the job (1..N,
1603 where N is the number of jobs). This helps fio_generate_plot
1604 fine the logs automatically. If 'per_job_logs' is false, then
1605 the filename will not include the job index. See 'Log File
1606 Formats'.
1607
1608write_iops_log=str Same as write_bw_log, but writes IOPS. If no filename is
1609 given with this option, the default filename of
1610 "jobname_type.x.log" is used,where x is the index of the job
1611 (1..N, where N is the number of jobs). Even if the filename
1612 is given, fio will still append the type of log. If
1613 'per_job_logs' is false, then the filename will not include
1614 the job index. See 'Log File Formats'.
1615
1616log_avg_msec=int By default, fio will log an entry in the iops, latency,
1617 or bw log for every IO that completes. When writing to the
1618 disk log, that can quickly grow to a very large size. Setting
1619 this option makes fio average the each log entry over the
1620 specified period of time, reducing the resolution of the log.
1621 See log_max_value as well. Defaults to 0, logging all entries.
1622
1623log_max_value=bool If log_avg_msec is set, fio logs the average over that
1624 window. If you instead want to log the maximum value, set this
1625 option to 1. Defaults to 0, meaning that averaged values are
1626 logged.
1627
1628log_offset=int If this is set, the iolog options will include the byte
1629 offset for the IO entry as well as the other data values.
1630
1631log_compression=int If this is set, fio will compress the IO logs as
1632 it goes, to keep the memory footprint lower. When a log
1633 reaches the specified size, that chunk is removed and
1634 compressed in the background. Given that IO logs are
1635 fairly highly compressible, this yields a nice memory
1636 savings for longer runs. The downside is that the
1637 compression will consume some background CPU cycles, so
1638 it may impact the run. This, however, is also true if
1639 the logging ends up consuming most of the system memory.
1640 So pick your poison. The IO logs are saved normally at the
1641 end of a run, by decompressing the chunks and storing them
1642 in the specified log file. This feature depends on the
1643 availability of zlib.
1644
1645log_compression_cpus=str Define the set of CPUs that are allowed to
1646 handle online log compression for the IO jobs. This can
1647 provide better isolation between performance sensitive jobs,
1648 and background compression work.
1649
1650log_store_compressed=bool If set, fio will store the log files in a
1651 compressed format. They can be decompressed with fio, using
1652 the --inflate-log command line parameter. The files will be
1653 stored with a .fz suffix.
1654
1655block_error_percentiles=bool If set, record errors in trim block-sized
1656 units from writes and trims and output a histogram of
1657 how many trims it took to get to errors, and what kind
1658 of error was encountered.
1659
1660lockmem=int Pin down the specified amount of memory with mlock(2). Can
1661 potentially be used instead of removing memory or booting
1662 with less memory to simulate a smaller amount of memory.
1663 The amount specified is per worker.
1664
1665exec_prerun=str Before running this job, issue the command specified
1666 through system(3). Output is redirected in a file called
1667 jobname.prerun.txt.
1668
1669exec_postrun=str After the job completes, issue the command specified
1670 though system(3). Output is redirected in a file called
1671 jobname.postrun.txt.
1672
1673ioscheduler=str Attempt to switch the device hosting the file to the specified
1674 io scheduler before running.
1675
1676disk_util=bool Generate disk utilization statistics, if the platform
1677 supports it. Defaults to on.
1678
1679disable_lat=bool Disable measurements of total latency numbers. Useful
1680 only for cutting back the number of calls to gettimeofday,
1681 as that does impact performance at really high IOPS rates.
1682 Note that to really get rid of a large amount of these
1683 calls, this option must be used with disable_slat and
1684 disable_bw as well.
1685
1686disable_clat=bool Disable measurements of completion latency numbers. See
1687 disable_lat.
1688
1689disable_slat=bool Disable measurements of submission latency numbers. See
1690 disable_slat.
1691
1692disable_bw=bool Disable measurements of throughput/bandwidth numbers. See
1693 disable_lat.
1694
1695clat_percentiles=bool Enable the reporting of percentiles of
1696 completion latencies.
1697
1698percentile_list=float_list Overwrite the default list of percentiles
1699 for completion latencies and the block error histogram.
1700 Each number is a floating number in the range (0,100],
1701 and the maximum length of the list is 20. Use ':'
1702 to separate the numbers, and list the numbers in ascending
1703 order. For example, --percentile_list=99.5:99.9 will cause
1704 fio to report the values of completion latency below which
1705 99.5% and 99.9% of the observed latencies fell, respectively.
1706
1707clocksource=str Use the given clocksource as the base of timing. The
1708 supported options are:
1709
1710 gettimeofday gettimeofday(2)
1711
1712 clock_gettime clock_gettime(2)
1713
1714 cpu Internal CPU clock source
1715
1716 cpu is the preferred clocksource if it is reliable, as it
1717 is very fast (and fio is heavy on time calls). Fio will
1718 automatically use this clocksource if it's supported and
1719 considered reliable on the system it is running on, unless
1720 another clocksource is specifically set. For x86/x86-64 CPUs,
1721 this means supporting TSC Invariant.
1722
1723gtod_reduce=bool Enable all of the gettimeofday() reducing options
1724 (disable_clat, disable_slat, disable_bw) plus reduce
1725 precision of the timeout somewhat to really shrink
1726 the gettimeofday() call count. With this option enabled,
1727 we only do about 0.4% of the gtod() calls we would have
1728 done if all time keeping was enabled.
1729
1730gtod_cpu=int Sometimes it's cheaper to dedicate a single thread of
1731 execution to just getting the current time. Fio (and
1732 databases, for instance) are very intensive on gettimeofday()
1733 calls. With this option, you can set one CPU aside for
1734 doing nothing but logging current time to a shared memory
1735 location. Then the other threads/processes that run IO
1736 workloads need only copy that segment, instead of entering
1737 the kernel with a gettimeofday() call. The CPU set aside
1738 for doing these time calls will be excluded from other
1739 uses. Fio will manually clear it from the CPU mask of other
1740 jobs.
1741
1742continue_on_error=str Normally fio will exit the job on the first observed
1743 failure. If this option is set, fio will continue the job when
1744 there is a 'non-fatal error' (EIO or EILSEQ) until the runtime
1745 is exceeded or the I/O size specified is completed. If this
1746 option is used, there are two more stats that are appended,
1747 the total error count and the first error. The error field
1748 given in the stats is the first error that was hit during the
1749 run.
1750
1751 The allowed values are:
1752
1753 none Exit on any IO or verify errors.
1754
1755 read Continue on read errors, exit on all others.
1756
1757 write Continue on write errors, exit on all others.
1758
1759 io Continue on any IO error, exit on all others.
1760
1761 verify Continue on verify errors, exit on all others.
1762
1763 all Continue on all errors.
1764
1765 0 Backward-compatible alias for 'none'.
1766
1767 1 Backward-compatible alias for 'all'.
1768
1769ignore_error=str Sometimes you want to ignore some errors during test
1770 in that case you can specify error list for each error type.
1771 ignore_error=READ_ERR_LIST,WRITE_ERR_LIST,VERIFY_ERR_LIST
1772 errors for given error type is separated with ':'. Error
1773 may be symbol ('ENOSPC', 'ENOMEM') or integer.
1774 Example:
1775 ignore_error=EAGAIN,ENOSPC:122
1776 This option will ignore EAGAIN from READ, and ENOSPC and
1777 122(EDQUOT) from WRITE.
1778
1779error_dump=bool If set dump every error even if it is non fatal, true
1780 by default. If disabled only fatal error will be dumped
1781
1782cgroup=str Add job to this control group. If it doesn't exist, it will
1783 be created. The system must have a mounted cgroup blkio
1784 mount point for this to work. If your system doesn't have it
1785 mounted, you can do so with:
1786
1787 # mount -t cgroup -o blkio none /cgroup
1788
1789cgroup_weight=int Set the weight of the cgroup to this value. See
1790 the documentation that comes with the kernel, allowed values
1791 are in the range of 100..1000.
1792
1793cgroup_nodelete=bool Normally fio will delete the cgroups it has created after
1794 the job completion. To override this behavior and to leave
1795 cgroups around after the job completion, set cgroup_nodelete=1.
1796 This can be useful if one wants to inspect various cgroup
1797 files after job completion. Default: false
1798
1799uid=int Instead of running as the invoking user, set the user ID to
1800 this value before the thread/process does any work.
1801
1802gid=int Set group ID, see uid.
1803
1804flow_id=int The ID of the flow. If not specified, it defaults to being a
1805 global flow. See flow.
1806
1807flow=int Weight in token-based flow control. If this value is used, then
1808 there is a 'flow counter' which is used to regulate the
1809 proportion of activity between two or more jobs. fio attempts
1810 to keep this flow counter near zero. The 'flow' parameter
1811 stands for how much should be added or subtracted to the flow
1812 counter on each iteration of the main I/O loop. That is, if
1813 one job has flow=8 and another job has flow=-1, then there
1814 will be a roughly 1:8 ratio in how much one runs vs the other.
1815
1816flow_watermark=int The maximum value that the absolute value of the flow
1817 counter is allowed to reach before the job must wait for a
1818 lower value of the counter.
1819
1820flow_sleep=int The period of time, in microseconds, to wait after the flow
1821 watermark has been exceeded before retrying operations
1822
1823In addition, there are some parameters which are only valid when a specific
1824ioengine is in use. These are used identically to normal parameters, with the
1825caveat that when used on the command line, they must come after the ioengine
1826that defines them is selected.
1827
1828[libaio] userspace_reap Normally, with the libaio engine in use, fio will use
1829 the io_getevents system call to reap newly returned events.
1830 With this flag turned on, the AIO ring will be read directly
1831 from user-space to reap events. The reaping mode is only
1832 enabled when polling for a minimum of 0 events (eg when
1833 iodepth_batch_complete=0).
1834
1835[psyncv2] hipri Set RWF_HIPRI on IO, indicating to the kernel that
1836 it's of higher priority than normal.
1837
1838[cpu] cpuload=int Attempt to use the specified percentage of CPU cycles.
1839
1840[cpu] cpuchunks=int Split the load into cycles of the given time. In
1841 microseconds.
1842
1843[cpu] exit_on_io_done=bool Detect when IO threads are done, then exit.
1844
1845[netsplice] hostname=str
1846[net] hostname=str The host name or IP address to use for TCP or UDP based IO.
1847 If the job is a TCP listener or UDP reader, the hostname is not
1848 used and must be omitted unless it is a valid UDP multicast
1849 address.
1850[libhdfs] namenode=str The host name or IP address of a HDFS cluster namenode to contact.
1851
1852[netsplice] port=int
1853[net] port=int The TCP or UDP port to bind to or connect to. If this is used
1854with numjobs to spawn multiple instances of the same job type, then this will
1855be the starting port number since fio will use a range of ports.
1856[libhdfs] port=int the listening port of the HFDS cluster namenode.
1857
1858[netsplice] interface=str
1859[net] interface=str The IP address of the network interface used to send or
1860 receive UDP multicast
1861
1862[netsplice] ttl=int
1863[net] ttl=int Time-to-live value for outgoing UDP multicast packets.
1864 Default: 1
1865
1866[netsplice] nodelay=bool
1867[net] nodelay=bool Set TCP_NODELAY on TCP connections.
1868
1869[netsplice] protocol=str
1870[netsplice] proto=str
1871[net] protocol=str
1872[net] proto=str The network protocol to use. Accepted values are:
1873
1874 tcp Transmission control protocol
1875 tcpv6 Transmission control protocol V6
1876 udp User datagram protocol
1877 udpv6 User datagram protocol V6
1878 unix UNIX domain socket
1879
1880 When the protocol is TCP or UDP, the port must also be given,
1881 as well as the hostname if the job is a TCP listener or UDP
1882 reader. For unix sockets, the normal filename option should be
1883 used and the port is invalid.
1884
1885[net] listen For TCP network connections, tell fio to listen for incoming
1886 connections rather than initiating an outgoing connection. The
1887 hostname must be omitted if this option is used.
1888
1889[net] pingpong Normaly a network writer will just continue writing data, and
1890 a network reader will just consume packages. If pingpong=1
1891 is set, a writer will send its normal payload to the reader,
1892 then wait for the reader to send the same payload back. This
1893 allows fio to measure network latencies. The submission
1894 and completion latencies then measure local time spent
1895 sending or receiving, and the completion latency measures
1896 how long it took for the other end to receive and send back.
1897 For UDP multicast traffic pingpong=1 should only be set for a
1898 single reader when multiple readers are listening to the same
1899 address.
1900
1901[net] window_size Set the desired socket buffer size for the connection.
1902
1903[net] mss Set the TCP maximum segment size (TCP_MAXSEG).
1904
1905[e4defrag] donorname=str
1906 File will be used as a block donor(swap extents between files)
1907[e4defrag] inplace=int
1908 Configure donor file blocks allocation strategy
1909 0(default): Preallocate donor's file on init
1910 1 : allocate space immidietly inside defragment event,
1911 and free right after event
1912
1913[rbd] clustername=str Specifies the name of the Ceph cluster.
1914[rbd] rbdname=str Specifies the name of the RBD.
1915[rbd] pool=str Specifies the naem of the Ceph pool containing RBD.
1916[rbd] clientname=str Specifies the username (without the 'client.' prefix)
1917 used to access the Ceph cluster. If the clustername is
1918 specified, the clientmae shall be the full type.id
1919 string. If no type. prefix is given, fio will add
1920 'client.' by default.
1921
1922[mtd] skip_bad=bool Skip operations against known bad blocks.
1923
1924[libhdfs] hdfsdirectory libhdfs will create chunk in this HDFS directory
1925[libhdfs] chunck_size the size of the chunck to use for each file.
1926
1927
19286.0 Interpreting the output
1929---------------------------
1930
1931fio spits out a lot of output. While running, fio will display the
1932status of the jobs created. An example of that would be:
1933
1934Threads: 1: [_r] [24.8% done] [ 13509/ 8334 kb/s] [eta 00h:01m:31s]
1935
1936The characters inside the square brackets denote the current status of
1937each thread. The possible values (in typical life cycle order) are:
1938
1939Idle Run
1940---- ---
1941P Thread setup, but not started.
1942C Thread created.
1943I Thread initialized, waiting or generating necessary data.
1944 p Thread running pre-reading file(s).
1945 R Running, doing sequential reads.
1946 r Running, doing random reads.
1947 W Running, doing sequential writes.
1948 w Running, doing random writes.
1949 M Running, doing mixed sequential reads/writes.
1950 m Running, doing mixed random reads/writes.
1951 F Running, currently waiting for fsync()
1952 f Running, finishing up (writing IO logs, etc)
1953 V Running, doing verification of written data.
1954E Thread exited, not reaped by main thread yet.
1955_ Thread reaped, or
1956X Thread reaped, exited with an error.
1957K Thread reaped, exited due to signal.
1958
1959Fio will condense the thread string as not to take up more space on the
1960command line as is needed. For instance, if you have 10 readers and 10
1961writers running, the output would look like this:
1962
1963Jobs: 20 (f=20): [R(10),W(10)] [4.0% done] [2103MB/0KB/0KB /s] [538K/0/0 iops] [eta 57m:36s]
1964
1965Fio will still maintain the ordering, though. So the above means that jobs
19661..10 are readers, and 11..20 are writers.
1967
1968The other values are fairly self explanatory - number of threads
1969currently running and doing io, rate of io since last check (read speed
1970listed first, then write speed), and the estimated completion percentage
1971and time for the running group. It's impossible to estimate runtime of
1972the following groups (if any). Note that the string is displayed in order,
1973so it's possible to tell which of the jobs are currently doing what. The
1974first character is the first job defined in the job file, and so forth.
1975
1976When fio is done (or interrupted by ctrl-c), it will show the data for
1977each thread, group of threads, and disks in that order. For each data
1978direction, the output looks like:
1979
1980Client1 (g=0): err= 0:
1981 write: io= 32MB, bw= 666KB/s, iops=89 , runt= 50320msec
1982 slat (msec): min= 0, max= 136, avg= 0.03, stdev= 1.92
1983 clat (msec): min= 0, max= 631, avg=48.50, stdev=86.82
1984 bw (KB/s) : min= 0, max= 1196, per=51.00%, avg=664.02, stdev=681.68
1985 cpu : usr=1.49%, sys=0.25%, ctx=7969, majf=0, minf=17
1986 IO depths : 1=0.1%, 2=0.3%, 4=0.5%, 8=99.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, >32=0.0%
1987 submit : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%, >=64=0.0%
1988 complete : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%, >=64=0.0%
1989 issued r/w: total=0/32768, short=0/0
1990 lat (msec): 2=1.6%, 4=0.0%, 10=3.2%, 20=12.8%, 50=38.4%, 100=24.8%,
1991 lat (msec): 250=15.2%, 500=0.0%, 750=0.0%, 1000=0.0%, >=2048=0.0%
1992
1993The client number is printed, along with the group id and error of that
1994thread. Below is the io statistics, here for writes. In the order listed,
1995they denote:
1996
1997io= Number of megabytes io performed
1998bw= Average bandwidth rate
1999iops= Average IOs performed per second
2000runt= The runtime of that thread
2001 slat= Submission latency (avg being the average, stdev being the
2002 standard deviation). This is the time it took to submit
2003 the io. For sync io, the slat is really the completion
2004 latency, since queue/complete is one operation there. This
2005 value can be in milliseconds or microseconds, fio will choose
2006 the most appropriate base and print that. In the example
2007 above, milliseconds is the best scale. Note: in --minimal mode
2008 latencies are always expressed in microseconds.
2009 clat= Completion latency. Same names as slat, this denotes the
2010 time from submission to completion of the io pieces. For
2011 sync io, clat will usually be equal (or very close) to 0,
2012 as the time from submit to complete is basically just
2013 CPU time (io has already been done, see slat explanation).
2014 bw= Bandwidth. Same names as the xlat stats, but also includes
2015 an approximate percentage of total aggregate bandwidth
2016 this thread received in this group. This last value is
2017 only really useful if the threads in this group are on the
2018 same disk, since they are then competing for disk access.
2019cpu= CPU usage. User and system time, along with the number
2020 of context switches this thread went through, usage of
2021 system and user time, and finally the number of major
2022 and minor page faults. The CPU utilization numbers are
2023 averages for the jobs in that reporting group, while the
2024 context and fault counters are summed.
2025IO depths= The distribution of io depths over the job life time. The
2026 numbers are divided into powers of 2, so for example the
2027 16= entries includes depths up to that value but higher
2028 than the previous entry. In other words, it covers the
2029 range from 16 to 31.
2030IO submit= How many pieces of IO were submitting in a single submit
2031 call. Each entry denotes that amount and below, until
2032 the previous entry - eg, 8=100% mean that we submitted
2033 anywhere in between 5-8 ios per submit call.
2034IO complete= Like the above submit number, but for completions instead.
2035IO issued= The number of read/write requests issued, and how many
2036 of them were short.
2037IO latencies= The distribution of IO completion latencies. This is the
2038 time from when IO leaves fio and when it gets completed.
2039 The numbers follow the same pattern as the IO depths,
2040 meaning that 2=1.6% means that 1.6% of the IO completed
2041 within 2 msecs, 20=12.8% means that 12.8% of the IO
2042 took more than 10 msecs, but less than (or equal to) 20 msecs.
2043
2044After each client has been listed, the group statistics are printed. They
2045will look like this:
2046
2047Run status group 0 (all jobs):
2048 READ: io=64MB, aggrb=22178, minb=11355, maxb=11814, mint=2840msec, maxt=2955msec
2049 WRITE: io=64MB, aggrb=1302, minb=666, maxb=669, mint=50093msec, maxt=50320msec
2050
2051For each data direction, it prints:
2052
2053io= Number of megabytes io performed.
2054aggrb= Aggregate bandwidth of threads in this group.
2055minb= The minimum average bandwidth a thread saw.
2056maxb= The maximum average bandwidth a thread saw.
2057mint= The smallest runtime of the threads in that group.
2058maxt= The longest runtime of the threads in that group.
2059
2060And finally, the disk statistics are printed. They will look like this:
2061
2062Disk stats (read/write):
2063 sda: ios=16398/16511, merge=30/162, ticks=6853/819634, in_queue=826487, util=100.00%
2064
2065Each value is printed for both reads and writes, with reads first. The
2066numbers denote:
2067
2068ios= Number of ios performed by all groups.
2069merge= Number of merges io the io scheduler.
2070ticks= Number of ticks we kept the disk busy.
2071io_queue= Total time spent in the disk queue.
2072util= The disk utilization. A value of 100% means we kept the disk
2073 busy constantly, 50% would be a disk idling half of the time.
2074
2075It is also possible to get fio to dump the current output while it is
2076running, without terminating the job. To do that, send fio the USR1 signal.
2077You can also get regularly timed dumps by using the --status-interval
2078parameter, or by creating a file in /tmp named fio-dump-status. If fio
2079sees this file, it will unlink it and dump the current output status.
2080
2081
20827.0 Terse output
2083----------------
2084
2085For scripted usage where you typically want to generate tables or graphs
2086of the results, fio can output the results in a semicolon separated format.
2087The format is one long line of values, such as:
2088
20892;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%
2090A description of this job goes here.
2091
2092The job description (if provided) follows on a second line.
2093
2094To enable terse output, use the --minimal command line option. The first
2095value is the version of the terse output format. If the output has to
2096be changed for some reason, this number will be incremented by 1 to
2097signify that change.
2098
2099Split up, the format is as follows:
2100
2101 terse version, fio version, jobname, groupid, error
2102 READ status:
2103 Total IO (KB), bandwidth (KB/sec), IOPS, runtime (msec)
2104 Submission latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
2105 Completion latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
2106 Completion latency percentiles: 20 fields (see below)
2107 Total latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
2108 Bw (KB/s): min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, stdev
2109 WRITE status:
2110 Total IO (KB), bandwidth (KB/sec), IOPS, runtime (msec)
2111 Submission latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
2112 Completion latency: min, max, mean, stdev(usec)
2113 Completion latency percentiles: 20 fields (see below)
2114 Total latency: min, max, mean, stdev (usec)
2115 Bw (KB/s): min, max, aggregate percentage of total, mean, stdev
2116 CPU usage: user, system, context switches, major faults, minor faults
2117 IO depths: <=1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, >=64
2118 IO latencies microseconds: <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000
2119 IO latencies milliseconds: <=2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000, 2000, >=2000
2120 Disk utilization: Disk name, Read ios, write ios,
2121 Read merges, write merges,
2122 Read ticks, write ticks,
2123 Time spent in queue, disk utilization percentage
2124 Additional Info (dependent on continue_on_error, default off): total # errors, first error code
2125
2126 Additional Info (dependent on description being set): Text description
2127
2128Completion latency percentiles can be a grouping of up to 20 sets, so
2129for the terse output fio writes all of them. Each field will look like this:
2130
2131 1.00%=6112
2132
2133which is the Xth percentile, and the usec latency associated with it.
2134
2135For disk utilization, all disks used by fio are shown. So for each disk
2136there will be a disk utilization section.
2137
2138
21398.0 Trace file format
2140---------------------
2141There are two trace file format that you can encounter. The older (v1) format
2142is unsupported since version 1.20-rc3 (March 2008). It will still be described
2143below in case that you get an old trace and want to understand it.
2144
2145In any case the trace is a simple text file with a single action per line.
2146
2147
21488.1 Trace file format v1
2149------------------------
2150Each line represents a single io action in the following format:
2151
2152rw, offset, length
2153
2154where rw=0/1 for read/write, and the offset and length entries being in bytes.
2155
2156This format is not supported in Fio versions => 1.20-rc3.
2157
2158
21598.2 Trace file format v2
2160------------------------
2161The second version of the trace file format was added in Fio version 1.17.
2162It allows to access more then one file per trace and has a bigger set of
2163possible file actions.
2164
2165The first line of the trace file has to be:
2166
2167fio version 2 iolog
2168
2169Following this can be lines in two different formats, which are described below.
2170
2171The file management format:
2172
2173filename action
2174
2175The filename is given as an absolute path. The action can be one of these:
2176
2177add Add the given filename to the trace
2178open Open the file with the given filename. The filename has to have
2179 been added with the add action before.
2180close Close the file with the given filename. The file has to have been
2181 opened before.
2182
2183
2184The file io action format:
2185
2186filename action offset length
2187
2188The filename is given as an absolute path, and has to have been added and opened
2189before it can be used with this format. The offset and length are given in
2190bytes. The action can be one of these:
2191
2192wait Wait for 'offset' microseconds. Everything below 100 is discarded.
2193 The time is relative to the previous wait statement.
2194read Read 'length' bytes beginning from 'offset'
2195write Write 'length' bytes beginning from 'offset'
2196sync fsync() the file
2197datasync fdatasync() the file
2198trim trim the given file from the given 'offset' for 'length' bytes
2199
2200
22019.0 CPU idleness profiling
2202--------------------------
2203In some cases, we want to understand CPU overhead in a test. For example,
2204we test patches for the specific goodness of whether they reduce CPU usage.
2205fio implements a balloon approach to create a thread per CPU that runs at
2206idle priority, meaning that it only runs when nobody else needs the cpu.
2207By measuring the amount of work completed by the thread, idleness of each
2208CPU can be derived accordingly.
2209
2210An unit work is defined as touching a full page of unsigned characters. Mean
2211and standard deviation of time to complete an unit work is reported in "unit
2212work" section. Options can be chosen to report detailed percpu idleness or
2213overall system idleness by aggregating percpu stats.
2214
2215
221610.0 Verification and triggers
2217------------------------------
2218Fio is usually run in one of two ways, when data verification is done. The
2219first is a normal write job of some sort with verify enabled. When the
2220write phase has completed, fio switches to reads and verifies everything
2221it wrote. The second model is running just the write phase, and then later
2222on running the same job (but with reads instead of writes) to repeat the
2223same IO patterns and verify the contents. Both of these methods depend
2224on the write phase being completed, as fio otherwise has no idea how much
2225data was written.
2226
2227With verification triggers, fio supports dumping the current write state
2228to local files. Then a subsequent read verify workload can load this state
2229and know exactly where to stop. This is useful for testing cases where
2230power is cut to a server in a managed fashion, for instance.
2231
2232A verification trigger consists of two things:
2233
22341) Storing the write state of each job
22352) Executing a trigger command
2236
2237The write state is relatively small, on the order of hundreds of bytes
2238to single kilobytes. It contains information on the number of completions
2239done, the last X completions, etc.
2240
2241A trigger is invoked either through creation ('touch') of a specified
2242file in the system, or through a timeout setting. If fio is run with
2243--trigger-file=/tmp/trigger-file, then it will continually check for
2244the existence of /tmp/trigger-file. When it sees this file, it will
2245fire off the trigger (thus saving state, and executing the trigger
2246command).
2247
2248For client/server runs, there's both a local and remote trigger. If
2249fio is running as a server backend, it will send the job states back
2250to the client for safe storage, then execute the remote trigger, if
2251specified. If a local trigger is specified, the server will still send
2252back the write state, but the client will then execute the trigger.
2253
225410.1 Verification trigger example
2255---------------------------------
2256Lets say we want to run a powercut test on the remote machine 'server'.
2257Our write workload is in write-test.fio. We want to cut power to 'server'
2258at some point during the run, and we'll run this test from the safety
2259or our local machine, 'localbox'. On the server, we'll start the fio
2260backend normally:
2261
2262server# fio --server
2263
2264and on the client, we'll fire off the workload:
2265
2266localbox$ fio --client=server --trigger-file=/tmp/my-trigger --trigger-remote="bash -c \"echo b > /proc/sysrq-triger\""
2267
2268We set /tmp/my-trigger as the trigger file, and we tell fio to execute
2269
2270echo b > /proc/sysrq-trigger
2271
2272on the server once it has received the trigger and sent us the write
2273state. This will work, but it's not _really_ cutting power to the server,
2274it's merely abruptly rebooting it. If we have a remote way of cutting
2275power to the server through IPMI or similar, we could do that through
2276a local trigger command instead. Lets assume we have a script that does
2277IPMI reboot of a given hostname, ipmi-reboot. On localbox, we could
2278then have run fio with a local trigger instead:
2279
2280localbox$ fio --client=server --trigger-file=/tmp/my-trigger --trigger="ipmi-reboot server"
2281
2282For this case, fio would wait for the server to send us the write state,
2283then execute 'ipmi-reboot server' when that happened.
2284
228510.2 Loading verify state
2286-------------------------
2287To load store write state, read verification job file must contain
2288the verify_state_load option. If that is set, fio will load the previously
2289stored state. For a local fio run this is done by loading the files directly,
2290and on a client/server run, the server backend will ask the client to send
2291the files over and load them from there.
2292
2293
229411.0 Log File Formats
2295---------------------
2296
2297Fio supports a variety of log file formats, for logging latencies, bandwidth,
2298and IOPS. The logs share a common format, which looks like this:
2299
2300time (msec), value, data direction, offset
2301
2302Time for the log entry is always in milliseconds. The value logged depends
2303on the type of log, it will be one of the following:
2304
2305 Latency log Value is latency in usecs
2306 Bandwidth log Value is in KB/sec
2307 IOPS log Value is IOPS
2308
2309Data direction is one of the following:
2310
2311 0 IO is a READ
2312 1 IO is a WRITE
2313 2 IO is a TRIM
2314
2315The offset is the offset, in bytes, from the start of the file, for that
2316particular IO. The logging of the offset can be toggled with 'log_offset'.
2317
2318If windowed logging is enabled though 'log_avg_msec', then fio doesn't log
2319individual IOs. Instead of logs the average values over the specified
2320period of time. Since 'data direction' and 'offset' are per-IO values,
2321they aren't applicable if windowed logging is enabled. If windowed logging
2322is enabled and 'log_max_value' is set, then fio logs maximum values in
2323that window instead of averages.
2324