Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
60 lines (41 loc) · 1.84 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

60 lines (41 loc) · 1.84 KB

Quickstart

Please visit uperf.org for the latest information.

On the slave run ./uperf -s

On the master (System under test) ./uperf -m netperf.xml

To get lots of statistics, use the -a option. For example:

./uperf -m netperf.xml -a

Please open Github issues for comments, bugs.

Compiling uperf

uperf uses the standard GNU build tools:

  • autoreconf --install && ./configure && make

Running uperf

  1. The ./uperf can be run as either a master (active) OR slave (passive).
  2. When run as active it needs master flag (-m) with a profile describing the test application. Sample profiles have been provided which are sure to run, more and more application profiles are expected to be added defining the various test cases.
  3. When run as the slave the program needs -s flag
  4. By default we are using port 20000 as the master port.
  5. We can set the verbose level, three level are provided
    1. (-V) High - all the messages are printed
    2. (-v) Medium - warnings and critical messages are displayed
    3. ( ) Low - only critical messages are displayed.
  6. Outputs: See usage for more information

Profile examples

Please see workloads/ directory for example profiles.

Compiling on Android

It is possible to build uperf as a part of AOSP platform. Because autotools are not used in Android platform config.h cannot be generated automatically. A version of config.h for Android N is created manually. Modifications may be required for compatibility with other Android versions.

Steps

  1. Download uperf sources and place them under appropriate AOSP directory, e.g. external/uperf
  2. Initialize build environment following standard Android steps (i.e. run source build/envsetup.sh, refer to Android official documentation for this part)
  3. Build uperf
    cd external/uperf
    mm