07-03-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by
nytty
Alright, I get your point. I though that using /dev/sdb1 moves to position 0
![Question Smilie](https://www.unix.com/images/icons/icon51.png)
AFAIK hdparm only gives you the speed of the disk and not the time of reading a given amount of data.
Do a little math. x megabytes per second is 1/x seconds per megabyte.
Quote:
So far with my tests I find that reading 16kb takes about the same time as reading 512b.
Disks do read-ahead for you. Disks transfer to the host in larger bundles than 512 bytes anyway. Disks even do their own
caching which the OS has no control over, which is going to throw off all your results supremely.
Too bad there isn't a tool which can tell you more about what your disk's doing, test uncached reads, or even configure hardware read-ahead to your preference... something like hdparm...
Quote:
I need this information to set the optimal page size of my system (oracle and mysql suggest these sizes)
Tell me exactly what they're asking you. I suspect you've gotten it a bit mixed up.
Quote:
Can you elaborate on why dropping the caches is a bad idea?
Because it's not realistic. Your system needs cache to work. Disk speeds are going to be awful without it.
Quote:
How about this sudo procedure:
- drop_caches
- flush disk-cache with hdparm
- make sure dd is in memory
- position the read head randomly on disk
- with DD: read X amount of bytes from the beginning of my file (this is timed)
Same problem as the exact same thing you did before. YOu're running huge programs to do tiny things and your results are going to be meaningless.
Last edited by Corona688; 07-03-2012 at 04:51 PM..
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
tpm_quote_tools
TPM QUOTE
TOOLS(8) TPM QUOTE TOOLS(8)
NAME
TPM Quote Tools
PROGRAMS
tpm_mkuuid, tpm_mkaik, tpm_loadkey, tpm_unloadkey, tpm_getpcrhash, tpm_updatepcrhash, tpm_getquote, tpm_verifyquote
DESCRIPTION
TPM Quote Tools is a collection of programs that provide support for TPM based attestation using the TPM quote operation.
A TPM contains a set of Platform Configuration Registers (PCRs). In a well configured machine, some of these registers are set to known
values during the boot up process or at other times. For example, a PCR might contain the hash of a boot loader in memory before it is
run.
The TPM quote operation is used to authoritatively verify the contents of a TPM's Platform Configuration Registers (PCRs). During provi-
sioning, a composite hash of a selected set of PCRs is computed. The TPM quote operation produces a composite hash that can be compared
with the one computed while provisioning.
To use the TPM quote operation, keys must be generated. During provisioning, an Attestation Identity Key (AIK) is generated for each TPM,
and the public part of the key is made available to entities that validate quotes.
The TPM quote operation returns signed data and a signature. The data that is signed contains the PCRs selected for the operation, the
composite hash for the selected PCRs, and a nonce provided as input, and used to prevent replay attacks. At provisioning time, the data
that is signed is stored, not just the composite hash. The signature is discarded.
An entity that wishes to evaluate a machine generates a nonce, and sends it along with the set of PCR used to generate the composite PCR
hash at provisioning time. For this use of the TPM quote operation, the signed data is ignored, and the signature returned is used to val-
idate the state of the TPM's PCRs. Given the signature, the evaluating entity replaces the nonce in the signed data generated at provi-
sioning time, and checks to see if the signature is valid for the data. If so, this check ensures the selected PCRs contain values that
match the ones measured during provisioning.
A typical scenario for an enterprise using these tools follows. The tools expect AIKs to be referenced via one enterprise-wide Universally
Unique Identifier (UUID). The program tpm_mkuuid creates one.
For each machine being checked, an AIK is created using tpm_mkaik. The key blob produced is bound to the UUID on its machine using
tpm_loadkey. The public key associated with the AIK is sent to the entities that verify quotes. Finally, the expected PCR composite hash
is obtained using tpm_getpcrhash. When the expected PCR values change, a new hash can be generated with tpm_updatepcrhash.
The program to obtain a quote, and thus measure the current state of the PCRs is tpm_getquote. The program that verifies the quote
describes the same PCR composite hash as was measured initially is tpm_verifyquote.
SEE ALSO
tpm_mkuuid(8), tpm_mkaik(8), tpm_loadkey(8), tpm_unloadkey(8), tpm_getpcrhash(8), tpm_updatepcrhash(8), tpm_getquote(8), tpm_verifyquote(8)
Oct 2010 TPM QUOTE TOOLS(8)