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Operating Systems AIX Filesystem using Oracle and mirroring VG ? Post 302710649 by filosophizer on Thursday 4th of October 2012 03:52:23 PM
Old 10-04-2012
@funksen

I looked at IOzone :
Ozone is a filesystem benchmark tool. The benchmark generates and measures a variety of file operations. IOzone has been ported to many machines a nd runs under many operating systems.
IOzone is useful for performing a broad filesystem analysis of a vendors computer platform. The benchmark tests file I/O performance for the following operations: Read, write, re-read, re-write, read backwards, read strided, fread, fwrite, random read, pread, mmap, aio_read, aio_write.

so what would the benchmark indicate, i mean how can we read it. If it indicates high I/O then after mirroring it would be even higher ? right ?
 

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FREAD(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						  FREAD(3)

NAME
fread, fwrite -- binary stream input/output LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> size_t fread(void * restrict ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, FILE * restrict stream); size_t fwrite(const void * restrict ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, FILE * restrict stream); DESCRIPTION
The function fread() reads nmemb objects, each size bytes long, from the stream pointed to by stream, storing them at the location given by ptr. The function fwrite() writes nmemb objects, each size bytes long, to the stream pointed to by stream, obtaining them from the location given by ptr. Mixing fread() and fwrite() calls without setting the file position explicitly using fsetpos(3) between read and write or write and read operations will lead to unexpected results because of buffering the file pointer not being set to the expected position after each operation completes. This behavior is allowed by ANSI C for efficiency and it will not be changed. RETURN VALUES
The functions fread() and fwrite() advance the file position indicator for the stream by the number of bytes read or written. They return the number of objects read or written. If size or nmemb is 0, the functions return 0 and the state of stream remains unchanged. If an error occurs, or the end-of-file is reached, the return value is a short object count (or zero). The function fread() does not distinguish between end-of-file and error, and callers must use feof(3) and ferror(3) to determine which occurred. The function fwrite() returns a value less than nmemb only if a write error has occurred. SEE ALSO
read(2), write(2) STANDARDS
The functions fread() and fwrite() conform to ANSI X3.159-1989 (``ANSI C89''). BSD
September 11, 2011 BSD
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