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Diffstat (limited to 'test')
-rw-r--r-- | test/AtomicWriterReader.txt | 48 |
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diff --git a/test/AtomicWriterReader.txt b/test/AtomicWriterReader.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc0a3bd --- /dev/null +++ b/test/AtomicWriterReader.txt @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +Atomic Tests Instructions +========================= + +Purpose: +-------- +This documents how to build and run the Atomic Writer and Reader tests. +The atomic test is to verify if atomic read-write operation on a system works. +The two programs are atomic_writer.c and atomic_reader.c. +atomic_writer.c: is the "write" part of the test; and +atomic_reader.c: is the "read" part of the test. + +Building the Tests +------------------ +The two test parts are automically built during configure and make process. +But to build them individually, you can do in test/ directory: +$ gcc atomic_writer +$ gcc atomic_reader + +Running the Tests +----------------- +$ atomic_writer -n <number of integers to write> -i <number of iterations for writer> +$ atomic_reader -n <number of integers to read> -i <number of iterations for reader> + +Note** +(1) "atomic_data" is the data file used by both the writer/reader in the + current directory. +(2) The value for -n should be the same for both the writer and the reader. +(3) The values for options n and i should be positive integers. +(4) For this version, the user has to provide both options -n and -i to run + the writer and the reader. +(5) If the user wants to run the writer for a long time, just provides a + large number for -i. + +Examples +-------- +$ ./atomic_writer -n 10000 -i 5 + Try to atomic write 10000 integers patterns 10000 time, and iterate the whole + write process 5 times. + +$ ./atomic_reader -n 10000 -i 2 + Try to atomic read 10000 integers patterns 10000 times, and iterate only once. + A summary is posted at the end. If all atomic reads are correct, it will not + show any read beyond "0 re-tries", that is all reads have succeeded in the + first read attempt. + +Remark: +You usually want the writer to iterate more times than the reader so that +the writing will not finish before reading is done. |