Stress imposes a configurable Amount of Load on your System
stress is a simple tool that imposes a configurable amount of CPU, memory, I/O, and disk stress on POSIX-compliant operating systems. It is written in portable ANSI C, and uses the GNU Autotools to compile on most UNIX-like operating systems. stress is not a benchmark. It is a tool used by system administrators to evaluate how well their systems will scale, by kernel programmers to evaluate perceived performance characteristics, and by systems programmers to expose the classes of bugs which only or more frequently manifest themselves when the system is under heavy load.
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed | Actions |
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stress-1.0.4.tar.bz2 | 0000165325161 KB | 1269812785over 14 years ago | |
stress-cflags-optflags.diff | 0000000359359 Bytes | 1259824050almost 15 years ago | |
stress-uninitialized-pointer.diff | 0000000296296 Bytes | 1200564681almost 17 years ago | |
stress.spec | 00000030152.94 KB | 1387727645almost 11 years ago |
Revision 12 (latest revision is 13)
hostmaster
committed
almost 11 years ago (revision 12)
fix build on centos6, fix build on opensuse >= 13.1