- teTeX 1.0.x packages have been moved to teTeX1* directories.
- teTeX 2.0.x packages have been moved to teTeX* directories and their base
name has been changed to teTeX (instead of teTeX2).
Add -+n option to disable re-testing.
Fixup -+n for throughput mode.
Fix Excel output when -+n is used.
Add support for the IBM S390 running Linux.
Cleanup naming conventions for the S390 and fixup a #define.
Add 64 bit compiles for s390x
Move BIG_ENDIAN to ZBIG_ENDIAN to avoid header conflicts.
Make random offsets always based on 48 bit random values.
Addition for make random offsets always based on 48 bit random values.
Make rands long longs.
Bug fix for 48 bit rands in bsd4_2 and Windows.
Make big_rand a long long.
Inject Erik's changes for Multi-client Windows.
Change proto version due to changes in Windows -+m support.
Add Eric to the contributors list.
Add more Windows support.
Spelling error.
Bug fixes from Erik H.
Reduce usage of shared memory.
Eliminate STUPID warning from the silly compiler.
Changes to remove warnings on BSD. Thanks to Christian Weisgerber
Support for the AMD64
Add -+k for constant aggregate data set size in throughput mode.
Add pread support for the TRU64 target. Department of Defense in Canada.
Add -+q for delay in seconds between tests.
Move variable up, GCC on Solaris was getting a bogus parse error
Add support for -+D (O_DSYNC) mode testing.
Make O_DSYNC conditional.
Add telemetry support for pread/pwrite
pkgsrc-wip.
Postal is a SMTP benchmark.
Postal-list will list all the possible expansions for an account name (used
for creating a list of accounts to create on your test server).
Rabid is the mad Biff, it is a POP benchmark.
2003-04-08, but the maintainers did not version the distfile. So make up
our own versioning, bump this to 4.0.1 and stick the distfile into a
DIST_SUBDIR (as suggested by agc@).
Taken from the dbench README file:
Netbench is a terrible benchmark, but it's an "industry
standard" and it's what is used in the press to rate windows
fileservers like Samba and WindowsNT.
In order for the development methodologies of the open source
community to work we need to be able to run this benchmark in
an environment that a bunch of us have access to. We need the
source to the benchmark so we can see what it does. We need
to be able to split it into pieces to look for individual
bottlenecks. In short, we need to open up netbench to the
masses.
To do this I have written three tools, dbench, tbench and
smbtorture. All three read a load description file called
client.txt that was derived from a network sniffer dump of a
real netbench run. client.txt is about 4MB and describes the
90 thousand operations that a netbench client does in a
typical netbench run. They parse client.txt and use it to
produce the same load without having to buy a huge lab. They
can simulate any number of simultaneous clients.
Improve macros and add prototypes.
Improve resolution of get_resolution().
Changes to support RedHat 9.0.
Special handling of NAME for broken frontend in Cygwin/Windows env.
Add support for the CrayX1
Remove reference to PAGE_SIZE for linux. This causes problems
with SuSe 8.
Fixup for SCO build.
Add -DHAVE_PREAD for Solaris8-64 target.
Code cleanup for Linux
Improve -+d so that each byte is more unique.
Improve byte level validation.
Provide byte level error detection with Found char and Expecting Char in
-+d mode.
Improve speed of -+d without losing uniqueness of bytes.
Fix so that Windows can use multiple processes. Needed mmap like SCO.
Use malloc() instead of mmap() for threads memory, instead of mmap.
Make CPU utilization use doubles everywhere.
Add support for CPU utilization while in distributed mode.
Make all times relative so multi node can do CPU usage.
Remove unused variables.
Zero compute_val inside of loops.
Add support for O_DIRECT for IRIX and IRIX64
Improve macros and add prototypes.
Improve resolution of get_resolution().
as benchmarks/nettest (originally in net).
The nettest and nettestd commands perform client and server
performance tests for various types of interprocess communication.
These tests time the data throughput of pipes and UNIX domain, TCP,
and UDP socket connections.
Supplied by Brian Ginsbach in PR#18985. Thanks!