On April 18, 2014 2:55:33 PM CEST, Paco Esteban <p...@onna.be> wrote:
>On Fri, 18 Apr 2014, Alexander Hall wrote:
>
>> 
>> 
>> On April 18, 2014 2:45:33 PM CEST, Paco Esteban <p...@onna.be> wrote:
>> >On Fri, 18 Apr 2014, Alexander Hall wrote:
>> >
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> On April 18, 2014 2:38:08 PM CEST, Paco Esteban <p...@onna.be>
>wrote:
>> >> >On Fri, 18 Apr 2014, Alexander Hall wrote:
>> >> >
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> On April 18, 2014 12:39:16 PM CEST, Paco Esteban <p...@onna.be>
>> >> >wrote:
>> >> >> >Hi all,
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> >I've a Lenovo T400 laptop with a SanDisk 64GB SSD disk.
>> >> >> >It used to have Debian 7 on it (everything working just fine),
>> >and
>> >> >now
>> >> >> >I
>> >> >> >want to use it as my personal laptop with OpenBSD.
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> >I've installed 5.4. Everything is working great (sound,
>webcam,
>> >etc)
>> >> >> >but
>> >> >> >disk. I get ~40MB/s writing and reding to and from disk. This
>> >very
>> >> >same
>> >> >> >disk reported 250MB/s reading and 190MB/s writing on debian7.
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> How did you measure this on openbsd? Copying files? dd? 
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> /Alexander
>> >> >
>> >> >dd in both OS's. Block size 1MB, count 5k from /dev/zero
>> >> >RAM is 4GB on this machine.
>> >> 
>> >> Do you use the raw device, e.g. /dev/rsd1c ?
>> >> 
>> >> /Alexander
>> >
>> >No, I used something like this:
>> >
>> >dd if=/dev/zero of=foo.bin bs=1048576 count=5000
>> 
>> To measure raw disk performance, dd to/from a raw partition (need not
>be 'c') is your friend.
>> 
>> Others maybe can explain filesystem overhead.
>
>Will I break things if I dd to raw device /dev/rsd0d (/dev/sd0d is
>mounted on /tmp in my case) ?

Most certainly, yes. Reading *from* said device is not a problem though. Just 
don't get it the wrong way... :-)

>
>Cheers,

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