On Fri, 2007-08-03 at 15:01 -0400, Robert Moskowitz wrote: > I need a program that will just run everything at max so I can measure > the max power used on some systems. My 'Kill a Watt' meter should show > up early next week. > > SO run that CPU at max, using all memory, and keeping the harddrive > spinning. > > I can jsut do pings on the lan card for it to stay awake. > > I have searched here and on the net and have come back with nothing. > Sorry for the HTML format - looked really bad in text mode in Evolution. Selected returns from "yum search stress" with some 3rd party repos enabled: stress.i386 0.18.8-1.2.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: stress tool to impose stress on a POSIX-compliant operating system Stress is a tool which imposes a configurable amount of CPU, memory, I/O, or disk stress on a POSIX-compliant operating system. Stress is written in highly-portable ANSI C, and uses the GNU Autotools to compile on a great number of UNIX-like operating systems. Stress is not a benchmark, it is rather a tool which puts the system under a repeatable, defined amount of load so that a systems programmer or system administrator can analyze the performance characteristics of the system or specific components thereof. http://weather.ou.edu/~apw/projects/stress/ spew.i386 1.0.4-1.2.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: Spew is used to measure I/O performance of character devices, block devices, and regular files. It can also be used to generate high I/O loads to stress systems while verifying data integrity. Spew is easy to use and is flexible. No configuration files or complicated client/server configurations are needed. Spew also generates its own data patterns that are designed to make it easy to find and debug data integrity problems. cpuburn.i586 1.4-1.2.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: cpuburn is a suite of assembly-coded routines designed to put maximum heat stress on the CPU and motherboard components by a P6/P5/K6/K7-optimized mix of FPU and ALU instructions. There are also routines to test RAM controllers (burnMMX/BX). Please note that this program is designed to heavily load chips. Undercooled, overclocked, or otherwise weak systems may fail, causing data loss (filesystem corruption) and possibly permanent damage to electronic components. Use it at your own risk!! cpuburn.i686 1.4-1.2.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: cpuburn is a suite of assembly-coded routines designed to put maximum heat stress on the CPU and motherboard components by a P6/P5/K6/K7-optimized mix of FPU and ALU instructions. There are also routines to test RAM controllers (burnMMX/BX). Please note that this program is designed to heavily load chips. Undercooled, overclocked, or otherwise weak systems may fail, causing data loss (filesystem corruption) and possibly permanent damage to electronic components. Use it at your own risk!! cpuburn.athlon 1.4-1.2.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: cpuburn is a suite of assembly-coded routines designed to put maximum heat stress on the CPU and motherboard components by a P6/P5/K6/K7-optimized mix of FPU and ALU instructions. There are also routines to test RAM controllers (burnMMX/BX). Please note that this program is designed to heavily load chips. Undercooled, overclocked, or otherwise weak systems may fail, causing data loss (filesystem corruption) and possibly permanent damage to electronic components. Use it at your own risk!! fio.i386 1.16.5-1.el5.rf rpmforge Matched from: I/O benchmark and stress/hardware verification tool fio is an I/O tool meant to be used both for benchmark and stress/hardware verification. It has support for 6 different types of I/O engines (sync, mmap, libaio, posixaio, SG v3, splice), I/O priorities (for newer Linux kernels), rate I/O, forked or threaded jobs, and much more. It can work on block devices as well as files. fio accepts job descriptions in a simple-to-understand text format. Several example job files are included. fio displays all sorts of I/O performance information, such as completion and submission latencies (avg/mean/deviation), bandwidth stats, CPU, and disk utilization, and more. It supports Linux, FreeBSD, and OpenSolaris. Phil -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20070803/8ea172a3/attachment-0005.html>