SUMMARY="A benchmark and test suite for filesystems" DESCRIPTION=" Bonnie++ is a benchmark suite that is aimed at performing a number of simple \ tests of hard drive and file system performance. Then you can decide which \ test is important and decide how to compare different systems after running \ it. I have no plans to ever have it produce a single number, because I don't \ think that a single number can be useful when comparing such things. The main program tests database type access to a single file (or a set of \ files if you wish to test more than 1G of storage), and it tests creation, \ reading, and deleting of small files which can simulate the usage of programs \ such as Squid, INN, or Maildir format email. The ZCAV program which I initially released as a seperate package tests the \ performance of different zones of a hard drive. It does not write any data (so \ you can use it on full file systems). It can show why comparing the speed of \ Windows at the start of a hard drive to Linux at the end of the hard drive \ (typical dual-boot scenario) isn't a valid comparison." HOMEPAGE="http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/" COPYRIGHT="1990 Tim Bray 1999 Russell Coker" LICENSE="GNU GPL v2" REVISION="1" SOURCE_URI="https://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/bonnie++-$portVersion.tgz" CHECKSUM_SHA256="a8d33bbd81bc7eb559ce5bf6e584b9b53faea39ccfb4ae92e58f27257e468f0e" PATCHES="bonnie++-$portVersion.patchset" if [ $effectiveTargetArchitecture = x86_gcc2 ]; then PATCHES+=" bonnie++-$portVersion.gcc2.patchset " fi ARCHITECTURES="all" PROVIDES=" bonnie++ = $portVersion cmd:bon_csv2html = $portVersion cmd:bon_csv2txt = $portVersion cmd:bonnie++ = $portVersion cmd:generate_randfile = $portVersion cmd:getc_putc = $portVersion cmd:getc_putc_helper = $portVersion cmd:zcav = $portVersion " REQUIRES=" haiku " BUILD_REQUIRES=" haiku_devel " BUILD_PREREQUIRES=" cmd:aclocal cmd:autoreconf cmd:g++ cmd:gawk cmd:make " BUILD() { autoreconf runConfigure ./configure \ --sbindir=$binDir make $jobArgs } INSTALL() { make install mv $prefix/sbin/* $binDir rm -rf $prefix/sbin }