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Multichase - a pointer chaser benchmark
Multiload - a superset of multichase which runs latency, memory bandwidth, and loaded-latency

* About this fork of multichase
This fork of multichase adds the ability to test DAX memory, which could be
any non-standard memory including nvdimm and CXL memory.

The current version supports "specific memory". If you specify memory via the -d <mem>
option, the memory can be any of the following:

* Dax memory (e.g. /dev/dax0.0)
* Pmem (e.g. /dev/pmem0.0)
* File-backed memory (e.g. /path/to/file). This is mostly intended for fs-dax files, but
  there might be other uses for it. The entire file will be mmapped as an arena. If the file
  starts out empty, you won't get any memory. And if you use a regular file, you will be
  testing the page cache, which might or might not remain populated dependign on the
  relationship between the size of memory and the size of your file. Tester beware...

* Back to the original content...

1/ BUILD

   - just type:

     $ make

2/ INSTALL

   - just run from current directory or copy multichase wherever you need to

3.1/ RUN Multichase

  - To get help

    $ multichase -h

   - By default, multichase will perform a pointer chase through an array
     size of 256MB and a stride size of 256 bytes for 2.5 seconds on a single
     thread:

     $ multichase

   - Pointer chase through an array of 4MB with a stride size of 64 bytes:

     $ multichase -m 4m -s 64

  - Pointer chase through an array of 1GB for 10 seconds (-n is the number of 0.5  second samples):

     $ multichase -m 1g -n 20

  - Pointer chase through an array of 256KB with a stride size of 128 bytes on 2 threads.
    Thread 0 accesses every 128th byte, thread 1 accesses every 128th byte offset by sizeof(void*)=8
    on 64bit architectures:

    $ multichase -m 256k -s 128 -t 2

3.2/ RUN Multiload

  - Latency Only (simple pointer chase)
    In this mode, Multiload can run any of the multichase commands above.
    A "-c" chase arg (other than chaseload) can be used or it will default to "simple".
    Using either "-c chaseload" and/or the "-l" load arguments will choose a different test mode.

    $ multiload

  - Bandwidth Only
    Multiload can run a memory bandwidth test using the "-l" load argument. The "-c" chase argument MUST NOT be used.
    Below command runs 5 samples (~2.5 seconds each), using 16 threads, using the glibc memcpy() function,
    using a 512M buffer per thread.

    $ multiload -n 5 -t 16 -m 512M -l memcpy-libc

  - Loaded Latency.
    Multiload can run 1 pointer chaser thread on logical cpu0 with multiple memory bandwidth load threads.
    The "-c chaseload" arg MUST be used. The "-l" arg MUST be used with one of the memory load arguments.
    Below command runs 5 samples (~2.5 seconds each), on 16 threads (1 chase, 15 stream-sum bandwidth loads),
    using a 512M buffer per thread. The chase thread uses a stride=16.

    $ multiload -s 16 -n 5 -t 16 -m 512M -c chaseload -l stream-sum

3.3/ RUN Pingpong & fairness

   - Pingpong: measure latency of exchanging a line between cores.
     To run, simply do:
    $ pingpong -u

   - Fairness: measure fairness with N threads competing to increment an atomic variable.
     To run, simply do:
    $ fairness

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