https://bench.sh - view system information and test the network, disk of your Linux server.
$ wget -qO- bench.sh | bash
----------------------------------------------------------------------
CPU model : Common KVM processor
Number of cores : 6
CPU frequency : 2399.998 MHz
Total size of Disk : 28.5 GB (2.2 GB Used)
Total amount of Mem : 3011 MB (631 MB Used)
Total amount of Swap : 3068 MB (0 MB Used)
System uptime : 11 days, 3 hour 10 min
Load average : 0.01, 0.11, 0.09
OS : Debian GNU/Linux 9
Arch : x86_64 (64 Bit)
Kernel : 4.9.0-4-amd64
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I/O speed(1st run) : 872 MB/s
I/O speed(2nd run) : 1.2 GB/s
I/O speed(3rd run) : 1.2 GB/s
Average I/O speed : 1109.9 MB/s
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Node Name IPv4 address Download Speed
CacheFly 205.234.175.175 106MB/s
...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
https://github.com/n-st/nench - A script loosely based on the established freevps.us/bench.sh.
$ (curl -s wget.racing/nench.sh | bash; curl -s wget.racing/nench.sh | bash) 2>&1 | tee nench.log
------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2017.06.01 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2017-10-31 03:38:08 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Common KVM processor
CPU cores: 6
Frequency: 2399.998 MHz
RAM: 2.9G
Swap:
Kernel: Linux 4.9.0-4-amd64 x86_64
Disks:
sda 30G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
3.438 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
5.385 seconds
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
3.174 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 59.0 us / 180.1 us / 3.71 ms / 57.3 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 4.02 k requests in 5.00 s, 1005.5 MiB, 804 iops, 201.1 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 810.62 MiB/s
2nd run: 1144.41 MiB/s
3rd run: 1239.78 MiB/s
average: 1064.94 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: x.x.x.x
Cachefly CDN: 82.72 MiB/s
...
https://github.com/mgutz/vpsbench - A script to run simple and comprehensive benchmarks on CPU and IO performance.
$ bash <(wget --no-check-certificate -O - https://raw.github.com/mgutz/vpsbench/master/vpsbench)
Benching I/O ... OK
Benching CPU. Bzipping 25MB file ... OK
Benching inbound network. Downloading 100MB file ... OK
Share at https://github.com/mgutz/vpsbench/wiki/VPS-Hosts
CPU model: Common KVM processor
Number of cores: 6
CPU frequency: 2399.998 MHz
Total amount of RAM: 3011 MB
Total amount of swap: MB
System uptime: 11 days, 2:04,
I/O speed: 910 MB/s
Bzip 25MB: 4.22s
Download 100MB file: 107MB/s
http://busylog.net/vps-benchmark/ - Benchmark disk, cpu and network.
$ wget http://busylog.net/FILES2DW/busytest.sh -O - -o /dev/null | bash
__
|__) _ | _ _ _ _|_
|__)|_|_)\/|(_)(_). | )(-|_
/ _/
http://busylog.net
-----------------------------
busyupload.sh V0.1
\|/
This is a early version with learning purpose... check the TODO
Some logs here: ftp_busy.log
-----------------------------
Check what we have installed here...
openssl......installed (YES)
wget.........installed (YES)
ftp..........not installed (NO)
ioping.......installed (YES)
hdparm.......installed (YES)
-----------------------------
Network upload test....
not performed tests.... test needs ftp and wget installed
-----------------------------
Test openSSL speeds (openssl signatures speed)....
Doing 512 bit private rsa's for 10s: 160961 512 bit private RSA's in 10.00s
Doing 512 bit public rsa's for 10s: 2403890 512 bit public RSA's in 10.00s
Doing 1024 bit private rsa's for 10s: 59315 1024 bit private RSA's in 10.00s
Doing 1024 bit public rsa's for 10s: 902191 1024 bit public RSA's in 10.00s
Doing 2048 bit private rsa's for 10s: 7758 2048 bit private RSA's in 10.00s
...
OpenSSL 1.1.0f 25 May 2017
built on: reproducible build, date unspecified
options:bn(64,64) rc4(8x,char) des(int) aes(partial) blowfish(ptr)
compiler: gcc -DDSO_DLFCN -DHAVE_DLFCN_H -DNDEBUG -DOPENSSL_THREADS -DOPENSSL_NO_STATIC_ENGINE...
sign verify sign/s verify/s
rsa 512 bits 0.000062s 0.000004s 16096.1 240389.0
rsa 1024 bits 0.000169s 0.000011s 5931.5 90219.1
rsa 2048 bits 0.001289s 0.000035s 775.8 28701.2
...
-----------------------------
Disk seek rate test (ioping)....
--- . (ext4 /dev/sda1) ioping statistics ---
14.9 k requests completed in 2.96 s, 58.4 MiB read, 5.06 k iops, 19.8 MiB/s
generated 15.0 k requests in 3.00 s, 58.4 MiB, 4.98 k iops, 19.5 MiB/s
min/avg/max/mdev = 61.9 us / 197.8 us / 5.88 ms / 97.4 us
-----------------------------
Direct (not cached) disk reads (hdparm)....
Test disk /dev/sda1
/dev/sda1:
Timing O_DIRECT disk reads: 3624 MB in 3.00 seconds = 1207.86 MB/sec
https://github.com/STH-Dev/linux-bench - Linux-Bench is a sscript that runs hardinfo, Unixbench 5.1.3, c-ray 1.1, STREAM, OpenSSL, sysbench (CPU), crafty, redis, NPB, NAMD, and 7-zip benchmarks.
$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/STH-Dev/linux-bench/master/linux-bench.sh && chmod +x linux-bench.sh && ./linux-bench.sh
Test sever used for all tests = StackLinux Mini VPS
https://github.com/kdlucas/byte-unixbench - UnixBench is the original BYTE UNIX benchmark suite, updated and revised by many people over the years.
https://github.com/axboe/fio - Flexible I/O Tester
https://github.com/akopytov/sysbench - Scriptable database and system performance benchmark
https://hdparm.sourceforge.io/ - get/set ATA/SATA drive parameters under Linux
http://www.textuality.com/bonnie/ - Bonnie is a benchmark which measures the performance of Unix file system operations. Bonnie is concerned with identifying bottlenecks.
https://github.com/Algodev-github/S - Small collection of programs to measure storage I/O performance.
https://github.com/phoronix-test-suite/phoronix-test-suite - The Phoronix Test Suite open-source, cross-platform automated testing/benchmarking software.
http://support.primatelabs.com/kb/geekbench/geekbench-4-command-line-tool - This tool allows you to use Geekbench 4 from a command prompt and automate it with shell scripts or batch files.
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/vdbench-downloads-1901681.html - Vdbench is a command line utility specifically created to help engineers and customers generate disk I/O workloads to be used for validating storage performance and storage data integrity.
http://www.iozone.org - is a filesystem benchmark tool. The benchmark generates and measures a variety of file operations.
http://www.iometer.org - Iometer is an I/O subsystem measurement and characterization tool for single and clustered systems.
https://github.com/ckolivas/interbench - Linux Interactivity Benchmark