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Date:      Wed, 23 Jan 2008 21:48:02 +0100
From:      Kris Kennaway <kris@FreeBSD.org>
To:        Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        performance@FreeBSD.org, Erik Cederstrand <erik@cederstrand.dk>
Subject:   Re: Performance Tracker project update
Message-ID:  <4797A802.8060509@FreeBSD.org>
In-Reply-To: <20080123202433.E63024@fledge.watson.org>
References:  <4796C717.9000507@cederstrand.dk>	<20080123193400.N63024@fledge.watson.org>	<4797A245.7080202@cederstrand.dk> <20080123202433.E63024@fledge.watson.org>

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Robert Watson wrote:

>> I think it's best if participating machines supply data regularly for 
>> an extended period of time. Single or infrequent data points for a 
>> specific configuration don't make much sense. We need to compare 
>> apples to apples.
> 
> Yes -- I was mostly thinking about backdating in order to play "catchup" 
> when a new benchmark is introduced.

One thing I am looking at is how to best create a library of world 
tarballs that can be used to populate a nfsroot (or hybrid of periodic 
tarballs + binary diffs to save space).  Then you could provide your 
benchmark in a standardized format (start/end/cleanup scripts, etc) and 
tell a machine "go and run this benchmark on every daily snapshot for 
the last year and give me the numbers".

Kris



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