<ul>
<li><a href="#Tools"> Tools</a><ul>
<li><a href="#Andrew Benchmark"> Andrew Benchmark</a></li>
- <li><a href="#afsfsperf"> afsfsperf</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#afsfsperf (low-level fileserver"> afsfsperf (low-level fileserver performance tester)</a></li>
<li><a href="#PostMark"> PostMark</a></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><a href="#Measurements"> Measurements</a><ul>
<li><a href="#AFS vs NFS"> AFS vs NFS</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Arla Numbers"> Arla Numbers</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#Afsfsperf collection"> Afsfsperf collection</a></li>
<li><a href="#Solaris x86 Inode vs Red Hat Nam"> Solaris x86 Inode vs Red Hat Namei on same hardware</a></li>
</ul>
</li>
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-### <a name="afsfsperf"></a> afsfsperf
+### <a name="afsfsperf (low-level fileserver"></a><a name="afsfsperf (low-level fileserver "></a> afsfsperf (low-level fileserver performance tester)
-[[Arla]] comes with a tool called afsfsperf, apparently available as part of their release.
+[[ArlaAFS]] comes with a tool called afsfsperf, apparently available as part of their release. afsfsperf is a small programm that acts like an minimal afs-client to observe the performace of the fileserver. For relevant numbers you need to run your instance of afsfsperf on a machine that is at least as fast as the fileserver.
----
----
-### <a name="Arla Numbers"></a> Arla Numbers
+### <a name="Afsfsperf collection"></a> Afsfsperf collection
-A large collection of information. Maybe someone could add some context?
+A large collection of information. All numbers done with afsfsperf from the [[ArlaAFS]] package. Varios of OS'es and filesystems benchmarked.
<http://www.e.kth.se/~jimmy/afsfsperf/afsfsperf.html>