Sysbench For Windows

To benchmark IO on Linux and MySQL transaction processing, SysBench is a popular choice that can do both. After poking around at the source code, it seems PostgreSQL and Oracle are also included for transaction processing testing if you have the proper header files, but I didn’t test those.

To benchmark IO on Windows and SQL Server transaction processing, Microsoft provides two tools, SQLIO and SQLIOSim. SQLIO is a misnomer in that it really doesn’t have much to do with SQL Server. It is a general purpose disk IO benchmark tool.

So today I was playing with SysBench and noticed that I can compile and build it on Windows as well. I decided I should run IO benchmark on a single machine with both tools (SQLIO and SysBench), and see if I could reconcile the results.

To make things simple, I thought I would just benchmark random read of 3G (orders of magnitude bigger than disk controller cache) files for 5 minutes (300 seconds) with a single thread using 16Kb block size, without adding any additional queue. I tested this on both my laptop and an Amazon EC2 instance. The commands for both tools are listed below, and they should perform the same thing, as far as I can tell. Let me know if you have any comments/pointers or if I missed anything.

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SysBench commands:

Fro SQLIO, here is the line in param.txt and command used:

As this is a quick test, I ran the same test twice and took the average value for comparison purposes. The detailed output is pasted at the end of this post.

On my Windows XP Pro Service Pack 2 laptop with Intel X-25 SSD:

IO/SecondThroughput/Second
SQLIO3833.559.90Mb
SysBench3390.7752.98Mb

So on my laptop, SQLIO’s results are 13% higher than that of SysBench.

On Amazon EC2 ami-c3e40daa with EBS device running Windows Server 2008 Datacenter Edition Service Pack 2, whose results varied widely between my two runs:

IO/SecondThroughput/Second
SQLIO678.9110.61Mb
SysBench408.966.39Mb
For

On this machine, SQLIO results are 66% higher than that of SysBench.

Below is the gory details.

Here are the detailed output on my laptop:
SQLIO
C:Program FilesSQLIO>sqlio -kR -s300 -dc -b16 -frandom -Fparam.txt
sqlio v1.5.SG
parameter file used: param.txt
file c:testfile.dat with 1 thread (0) using mask 0x0 (0)
1 thread reading for 300 secs from file c:testfile.dat
using 16KB random IOs
using specified size: 3072 MB for file: c:testfile.dat
initialization done
CUMULATIVE DATA:
throughput metrics:
IOs/sec: 3835.39
MBs/sec: 59.92

C:Program FilesSQLIO>sqlio -kR -s300 -dc -b16 -frandom -Fparam.txt
sqlio v1.5.SG
parameter file used: param.txt
file c:testfile.dat with 1 thread (0) using mask 0x0 (0)
1 thread reading for 300 secs from file c:testfile.dat
using 16KB random IOs
using specified size: 3072 MB for file: c:testfile.dat
initialization done
CUMULATIVE DATA:
throughput metrics:
IOs/sec: 3832.00
MBs/sec: 59.87

SysBench
C:MessAroundsysbench-0.4.12sysbench-0.4.12sysbenchRelWithDebInfo>sysbench.e
xe –test=fileio –file-total-size=3G –file-test-mode=rndrd –max-time=300 run
sysbench 0.4: multi-threaded system evaluation benchmark

Running the test with following options:
Number of threads: 1

Extra file open flags: 0
128 files, 24Mb each
3Gb total file size
Block size 16Kb
Number of random requests for random IO: 10000
Read/Write ratio for combined random IO test: 1.50
Periodic FSYNC enabled, calling fsync() each 100 requests.
Calling fsync() at the end of test, Enabled.
Using synchronous I/O mode
Doing random read test
Threads started!
WARNING: Operation time (18446744073709226000.000000) is greater than maximal co
unted value, counting as 10000000000000.000000
WARNING: Percentile statistics will be inaccurate
Done.

Operations performed: 10000 Read, 0 Write, 0 Other = 10000 Total
Read 156.25Mb Written 0b Total transferred 156.25Mb (52.143Mb/sec)
3337.16 Requests/sec executed

Test execution summary:
total time: 2.9966s
total number of events: 10000
total time taken by event execution: 2.9343
per-request statistics:
min: 0.01ms
avg: 0.29ms
max: 18446744073709.47ms
approx. 95 percentile: 0.48ms

Threads fairness:
events (avg/stddev): 10000.0000/0.00
execution time (avg/stddev): 2.9343/0.00

C:MessAroundsysbench-0.4.12sysbench-0.4.12sysbenchRelWithDebInfo>sysbench.e
xe –test=fileio –file-total-size=3G –file-test-mode=rndrd –max-time=300 run
sysbench 0.4: multi-threaded system evaluation benchmark

Running the test with following options:
Number of threads: 1

Extra file open flags: 0
128 files, 24Mb each
3Gb total file size
Block size 16Kb
Number of random requests for random IO: 10000
Read/Write ratio for combined random IO test: 1.50
Periodic FSYNC enabled, calling fsync() each 100 requests.
Calling fsync() at the end of test, Enabled.
Using synchronous I/O mode
Doing random read test
Threads started!
WARNING: Operation time (18446744073694841000.000000) is greater than maximal co
unted value, counting as 10000000000000.000000
WARNING: Percentile statistics will be inaccurate
Done.

Operations performed: 10000 Read, 0 Write, 0 Other = 10000 Total
Read 156.25Mb Written 0b Total transferred 156.25Mb (53.818Mb/sec)
3444.38 Requests/sec executed

Test execution summary:
total time: 2.9033s
total number of events: 10000
total time taken by event execution: 2.8777
per-request statistics:
min: 0.01ms
avg: 0.29ms
max: 18446744073696.34ms
approx. 95 percentile: 15.39ms

Threads fairness:
events (avg/stddev): 10000.0000/0.00
execution time (avg/stddev): 2.8777/0.00

Here are the detailed output from Amazon EC2 ami-c3e40daa with EBS device:
SQLIO
c:Program FilesSQLIO>sqlio -kR -t1 -s300 -dC -frandom -b16 -Fparam.txt -BH -LS

sqlio v1.5.SG
using system counter for latency timings, 3579545 counts per second
parameter file used: param.txt
file c:testfile.dat with 1 thread (0) using mask 0x0 (0)
1 thread reading for 300 secs from file c:testfile.dat
using 16KB random IOs
buffering set to use hardware disk cache (but not file cache)
size of file c:testfile.dat needs to be: 3221225472 bytes
current file size: 0 bytes
need to expand by: 3221225472 bytes
expanding c:testfile.dat … done.
using specified size: 3072 MB for file: c:testfile.dat
initialization done
CUMULATIVE DATA:
throughput metrics:
IOs/sec: 1230.94
MBs/sec: 19.23
latency metrics:
Min_Latency(ms): 0
Avg_Latency(ms): 0
Max_Latency(ms): 204
histogram:
ms: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24+
%: 98 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

c:Program FilesSQLIO>sqlio -kR -t1 -s300 -dC -frandom -b16 -Fparam.txt -BH -LS

sqlio v1.5.SG
using system counter for latency timings, 3579545 counts per second
parameter file used: param.txt
file c:testfile.dat with 1 thread (0) using mask 0x0 (0)
1 thread reading for 300 secs from file c:testfile.dat
using 16KB random IOs
buffering set to use hardware disk cache (but not file cache)
using specified size: 3072 MB for file: c:testfile.dat
initialization done
CUMULATIVE DATA:
throughput metrics:
IOs/sec: 126.88
MBs/sec: 1.98
latency metrics:
Min_Latency(ms): 0
Avg_Latency(ms): 7
Max_Latency(ms): 497
histogram:
ms: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24+
%: 13 9 0 3 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 2

C:UsersAdministratorDocumentssysbench-0.4.12sysbenchRelWithDebInfo>sysbenc
h.exe –test=fileio –file-total-size=3G –file-test-mode=rndrd –max-time=300 r
un
sysbench 0.4: multi-threaded system evaluation benchmark

Running the test with following options:
Number of threads: 1

Extra file open flags: 0
128 files, 24Mb each
3Gb total file size
Block size 16Kb
Number of random requests for random IO: 10000
Read/Write ratio for combined random IO test: 1.50
Periodic FSYNC enabled, calling fsync() each 100 requests.
Calling fsync() at the end of test, Enabled.
Using synchronous I/O mode
Doing random read test
Threads started!
Done.

Operations performed: 10000 Read, 0 Write, 0 Other = 10000 Total
Read 156.25Mb Written 0b Total transferred 156.25Mb (10.64Mb/sec)
680.95 Requests/sec executed

Test execution summary:
total time: 14.6854s
total number of events: 10000
total time taken by event execution: 14.6048
per-request statistics:
min: 0.01ms
avg: 1.46ms
max: 150.29ms
approx. 95 percentile: 4.77ms

Threads fairness:
events (avg/stddev): 10000.0000/0.00
execution time (avg/stddev): 14.6048/0.00

C:UsersAdministratorDocumentssysbench-0.4.12sysbenchRelWithDebInfo>sysbenc
h.exe –test=fileio –file-total-size=3G –file-test-mode=rndrd –max-time=300 r
un
sysbench 0.4: multi-threaded system evaluation benchmark

Testing Windows IO With SQLIO And SysBench – The Ji Village News

Running the test with following options:
Number of threads: 1

Extra file open flags: 0
128 files, 24Mb each
3Gb total file size
Block size 16Kb
Number of random requests for random IO: 10000
Read/Write ratio for combined random IO test: 1.50
Periodic FSYNC enabled, calling fsync() each 100 requests.
Calling fsync() at the end of test, Enabled.
Using synchronous I/O mode
Doing random read test
Threads started!
Done.

Operations performed: 10000 Read, 0 Write, 0 Other = 10000 Total
Read 156.25Mb Written 0b Total transferred 156.25Mb (2.1371Mb/sec)
136.77 Requests/sec executed

Test execution summary:
total time: 73.1139s
total number of events: 10000
total time taken by event execution: 73.0284
per-request statistics:
min: 0.02ms
avg: 7.30ms
max: 728.84ms
approx. 95 percentile: 23.08ms

Threads fairness:
events (avg/stddev): 10000.0000/0.00
execution time (avg/stddev): 73.0284/0.00

DBT2 Benchmark Tool

The DBT2 Benchmark Tool can be used to run automated benchmarks for MySQL and MySQL Cluster. It supports three types of benchmarks:

  • DBT2
  • SysBench
  • flexAsynch

It has been primarily used on Linux x86_64 platforms, but occasional benchmarks have also been run on Solaris and Windows. It can be used to test MySQL Cluster 8.0.

Sysbench Windows Alternative

DBT2 is an open source benchmark that mimics an OLTP application for a company owning large amounts of warehouses. It contains transactions to handle New Orders, Order Entry, Order Status, Payment and Stock handling. The transactions are a mix of read and write transactions. Using MySQL the benchmark tests a single MySQL Server instance. Using MySQL Cluster the benchmark tool can drive large distributed tests with many MySQL Cluster Data nodes and MySQL Server instances. The DBT2 Benchmark Tool provides scripts to automate execution of these benchmarks.

The DBT2 tarball also contains a benchmark tool using PowerShell on Windows to run sysbench on Windows. There is also scripts mimicing top on Windows. Finally there is also a set of simple scripts to use the perf tool on Linux.

FlexAsynch is a benchmark specifically developed to test scalability of MySQL Cluster. It is found in any MySQL Cluster source tarball under storage/ndb/test/ndbapi. The features required to run it in this parallel manner requires a MySQL Cluster 7.x version released after the 15th of October 2011. The DBT2 Benchmark Tool can be used to run distributed tests with many MySQL Cluster Data nodes and many flexAsynch benchmark programs in a completely automated fashion. The latest version of flexAsynch mainly exists in the source tree for the 2 most recent versions.

MySQL Server Version: 5.6 and later
MySQL Cluster Version: MySQL Cluster 7.3 and later
Download DBT2 Benchmark Tool » [ md5 |signature ]

SysBench Benchmark Tool

Sysbench is a popular open source benchmark to test open source DBMSs. The DBT2 Benchmark Tool can be used to run automated test runs of Sysbench for a single MySQL Server instance running InnoDB or running a MySQL Cluster set-up with a single MySQL Server instance.

Sysbench Windows Build

All automated benchmark programs assume that the machines can be accessed using ssh. All benchmarks require a MySQL source or binary tarball packed with gzip. The Sysbench benchmark also requires usage of the Sysbench tarball downloadable below. This tarball (Sysbench 0.4.12.16) contains a number of extra features added to Sysbench 0.4.12 which are used by the DBT2 Benchmark Tool. The DBT2 Benchmark Tool tarball (dbt2-0.37.50) is based on dbt2-0.37 with a lot of changes and additions to automate benchmark runs.

MySQL Server Version: 5.6 and later
MySQL Cluster Version: MySQL Cluster 7.3 and later
Download SysBench Benchmark Tool » [ md5 |signature ]


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