On Sat, Aug 28, 2004 at 05:09:28AM -0500, Steve Bergman wrote: > On Fri, 2004-08-27 at 23:54 -0700, Hans Reiser wrote: > > > > > I didn't write this (more precisely, it only vaguely resembles what I > > wrote in 1996). Are you saying that it reports system time as real > > time? If yes, then it is an error, we need to go remove a bunch of > > numbers from our benchmarks, and thanks for finding it. > > > > Zam, please comment. > > > > No. I'm saying that on my setup (kernel 2.6.8.1-mm4/perl 5.8.5/bash > 3.00) the first line returned from running the test is the: > > [1]+ Done ...
> line which throws the array indexes off by 1 and I always get 0 for the > real time and, yes, the real time gets reported as the system time, I > think. Plus I get a warning about the fact that "Done" is not numeric. > This is obviously a problem with my particular setup. Yes. but that real/sys time parsing isn't reliable. > After bumping the indexes up by 1, I get the correct real time reported > as "STAT REAL_TIME". And the system time is reported as "STAT > CPU_TIME". > > "STAT CPU_UTIL", however is computed in a completely different way based > on numbers collected from /proc/stat. If I'm, reading > linux/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt correctly, it is trying to > return the (system time) / (total time). The total time agrees with > "STAT REAL_TIME". However, the (system time) that it comes up with here > is always considerably higher than "STAT CPU_TIME". CPU_UTIL counts other background processes too. The foreground process may just wait when all work is done by pdflush. I think CPU_UTIL is more useful than CPU_TIME. > > User error is quite possible, as I am: > > 1. Just getting to know mongo. > 2. Not a perl guy. i don't like perl too much, but seems Perl is perfect for the things you just did (the fixes). > 3. There is obviously something mongo.pl doesn't like about my setup. > > -Steve Bergman > > P.S. In the 2 tests I've run, reiser4 is not doing all that badly > against ext3 in OVERWRITE and MODIFY, though ext3 does come in faster. > Reiser4 trails badly on APPEND however, ext3 (data=ordered, without > htree) being some 2.5 - 4 times faster. -- Alex.