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Quick reference

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Quick reference (cont.)

docker-iops

tool-dockers

docker-iops is a IO benchmarking tool Docker containing Fio and IOPing. For more information, please see:

Using the Container

We chose Alpine as a lightweight base with a reasonably small surface area for security concerns, but with enough functionality for development, interactive debugging, and useful health, watch, and exec scripts running under iops in the container. The image also includes curl since it is so commonly used for health checks.

iops always runs under dumb-init, which handles reaping zombie processes and forwards signals on to all processes running in the container. We also use su-exec to run iops as a non-root "iops" user for better security.

The container exposes VOLUME /iops/data, which is a path were file I/O benchmarks will place its persisted state. If this is bind mounted then ownership will be changed to the iops user when the container starts.

The container has a I/O configuration directory set up at /iops/config and the tool will load any configuration files placed here by binding a volume or by composing a new image and adding files. If this is bind mounted then ownership will be changed to the iops user when the container starts.

Introduction

Frequently disk speed limits application performance. Relative to MEM and CPU, disk speed (even SSDs) is not yet comparable to MEM and CPU. There are lots of tool alternatives for measuring disk speed.

Some use dd (data duplicator) to measure performance, for example:

dd if=/dev/zero of=test_file bs=64k count=16k conv=fdatasync

However, dd has several limitations that make it less ideal for benchmarking I/O performance.

  • it performs single-threaded, sequential-writes, that may not match your workload
  • it writes a small amount of data, so caching affects results
  • it executes briefly, so results are inconsistent
  • it doesn't support read speed tests

For disk benchmarking there are two kind of parameters that give a complete overview: IOPS (I/O Per Second) and latency. This Docker provides better alternatives: Fio and IOPing. This documentation provides explains how to measure IOPS with Fio, and disk latency with IOPing. In addition to dd, other tools such as hdparm are documented.

Running the Docker

The sections below illustrate common running scenarios.

Random Read/Write Performance

Run the following command:

docker run --rm -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data tooldockers/iops:85f56cd \
    --randrepeat=1 --ioengine=libaio --direct=1 --gtod_reduce=1 \
    --name=test --filename=test --bs=4k --iodepth=64 --size=4G \
    --readwrite=randrw --rwmixread=75

This will create a 4 GB file, and perform 4KB reads and writes using a 75% / 25% (ie 3 reads are performed for every 1 write) split within the file, with 64 operations running at a time. The 3:1 ratio is a rough approximation of your typical database. You can change it as per your need.

Sequential Read Performance

docker run --rm -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data tooldockers/iops \
    --randrepeat=1 --ioengine=libaio --direct=1 --gtod_reduce=1 \
    --name=seq-read --filename=seq-read --bs=4k --iodepth=256 --size=100m \
    --readwrite=read --runtime=120 --time_based --numjobs=4 --group_reporting

In some cases you may see more consistent results if you use a job file instead of running the command directly. Use the following instructions for this approach:

  1. Create a job file, read.fio, with the following:

    [global]
    bs=4K
    iodepth=256
    direct=1
    ioengine=libaio
    group_reporting
    time_based
    runtime=120
    numjobs=4
    name=seq-read
    size=4g
    rw=read
    
    [job1]
    filename=device name
    
  2. Run the job using the following command:

    docker run --rm --privileged -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data -v `pwd`/read.fio:/iops/data/read.fio tooldockers/iops fio read.fio

Random Read Performance

Run the below command to test random read performance.

docker run --rm -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data tooldockers/iops \
    --randrepeat=1 --ioengine=libaio --direct=1 --gtod_reduce=1 \
    --name=rand-read --filename=test --bs=4k --iodepth=64 --size=4G \
    –readwrite=randread

Random Write Performance

Run the below command to test random write performance.

docker run --rm -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data tooldockers/iops \
    --randrepeat=1 --ioengine=libaio --direct=1 --gtod_reduce=1 \
    --name=test --filename=test --bs=4k --iodepth=64 --size=4G \
    –readwrite=randwrite

IO Latency on Individual Requests

We will be using IOPing to measure the latency on individual request.

Run the below command to measure IO latency using IOPing.

docker run --rm -v `pwd`/data:/iops/data tooldockers/iops ioping -c 10 /iops/data

The -c 10 option is the number request IOPing will make. The program takes also as argument the file and/or device to check. In this case, the actual working directory. Program output is:

setting ownership
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=1 time=318.6 us (warmup)
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=2 time=1.56 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=3 time=1.04 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=4 time=1.11 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=5 time=1.37 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=6 time=1.13 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=7 time=958.1 us (fast)
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=8 time=1.12 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=9 time=1.22 ms
4 KiB <<< /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs): request=10 time=1.21 ms

--- /iops/data (fuse.osxfs osxfs) ioping statistics ---
9 requests completed in 10.7 ms, 36 KiB read, 839 iops, 3.28 MiB/s
generated 10 requests in 9.01 s, 40 KiB, 1 iops, 4.44 KiB/s
min/avg/max/mdev = 958.1 us / 1.19 ms / 1.56 ms / 170.2 us

HDPARM

hdparm is a command line tool to get/set SATA/IDE device parameters. It can also be used to perform basic performance testing of buffered and cached reads.

Get Drive Geometry

To get the drive geometry:

docker run -it --privileged --rm tooldockers/iops hdparm -g /dev/sda

Short Read Test (hdparm)

To perform a short test of buffered and cached reads:

docker run -it --privileged --rm tooldockers/iops hdparm -tT /dev/sda

License

View license information for the software contained in this image.

As with all Docker images, these likely also contain other software which may be under other licenses (such as Bash, etc from the base distribution, along with any direct or indirect dependencies of the primary software being contained).

As for any pre-built image usage, it is the image user's responsibility to ensure that any use of this image complies with any relevant licenses for all software contained within.

License

License

About

tool-dockers maintains and funds this project.