Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Doug Ambrisko
2f53b7ce03 This will not compile without:
http://www.ambrisko.com/doug/listio_kqueue/listio_kqueue.patch

Note: it is a good idea to run this against a physical drive to
exercise the physio fast path (ie. lio_kqueue /dev/<something safe>)
This will ensure op's counting per LIO request is correct.  It is
currently broken the above patch fixes it.

Sponsored by:   IronPort
2005-03-02 04:00:55 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
5a199d9799 Add an AIO & kqueue regression test. It is a good idea to run this
against a disk as the argument.  If you don't it will use a temp file.
The raw disk will use the kernel physio fast path method until the
max number of pending op's is reached then it will queue them.  File
system op's are always queued.  This is more important with LIO since
operation can get split across and accounting of op's is broken with LIO.

Note that this was broken when locking was added to kqueue (ie. 5.3)
My fix needs to be better integrated with FreeBSD.

Next is an LIO test and implementation.

Sponsored by:	IronPort
2005-03-02 03:32:01 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
e653b48c80 Start the dreaded NOFOO -> NO_FOO conversion.
OK'ed by:	core
2004-12-21 08:47:35 +00:00
Robert Watson
b1954f17a8 Print a warning if running as !root for aio_md_test rather than failing
the test.  Privilege is required in order to allocate an md device.
2004-12-06 13:15:23 +00:00
Robert Watson
5cb0b08e40 Add a basic aio functionality regression test, which simply writes and
then reads from a fairly broad range of object types: regular file,
fifo, UNIX socketpair, pty, UNIX pipe, and an md device.  Not a deep
test of functionality, just a basic test that aio_write followed by
aio_read returns the correct data in a relatively timely manner.

Requested by:	phk
2004-12-06 12:56:38 +00:00