Using below program I try to test how fast I can write to disk using std::ofstream
.
I achieve around 300 MiB/s when writing a 1 GiB file.
However, a simple file copy using the cp
command is at least twice as fast.
Is my program hitting the hardware limit or can it be made faster?
#include <chrono>
#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
char payload[1000 * 1000]; // 1 MB
void test(int MB)
{
// Configure buffer
char buffer[32 * 1000];
std::ofstream of("test.file");
of.rdbuf()->pubsetbuf(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
auto start_time = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
// Write a total of 1 GB
for (auto i = 0; i != MB; ++i)
{
of.write(payload, sizeof(payload));
}
double elapsed_ns = std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::nanoseconds>(std::chrono::steady_clock::now() - start_time).count();
double megabytes_per_ns = 1e3 / elapsed_ns;
double megabytes_per_s = 1e9 * megabytes_per_ns;
std::cout << "Payload=" << MB << "MB Speed=" << megabytes_per_s << "MB/s" << std::endl;
}
int main()
{
for (auto i = 1; i <= 10; ++i)
{
test(i * 100);
}
}
Output:
Payload=100MB Speed=3792.06MB/s
Payload=200MB Speed=1790.41MB/s
Payload=300MB Speed=1204.66MB/s
Payload=400MB Speed=910.37MB/s
Payload=500MB Speed=722.704MB/s
Payload=600MB Speed=579.914MB/s
Payload=700MB Speed=499.281MB/s
Payload=800MB Speed=462.131MB/s
Payload=900MB Speed=411.414MB/s
Payload=1000MB Speed=364.613MB/s
Update
I changed from std::ofstream
to fwrite
:
#include <chrono>
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
char payload[1024 * 1024]; // 1 MiB
void test(int number_of_megabytes)
{
FILE* file = fopen("test.file", "w");
auto start_time = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
// Write a total of 1 GB
for (auto i = 0; i != number_of_megabytes; ++i)
{
fwrite(payload, 1, sizeof(payload), file );
}
fclose(file); // TODO: RAII
double elapsed_ns = std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::nanoseconds>(std::chrono::steady_clock::now() - start_time).count();
double megabytes_per_ns = 1e3 / elapsed_ns;
double megabytes_per_s = 1e9 * megabytes_per_ns;
std::cout << "Size=" << number_of_megabytes << "MiB Duration=" << long(0.5 + 100 * elapsed_ns/1e9)/100.0 << "s Speed=" << megabytes_per_s << "MiB/s" << std::endl;
}
int main()
{
test(256);
test(512);
test(1024);
test(1024);
}
Which improves the speed to 668MiB/s for a 1 GiB file:
Size=256MiB Duration=0.4s Speed=2524.66MiB/s
Size=512MiB Duration=0.79s Speed=1262.41MiB/s
Size=1024MiB Duration=1.5s Speed=664.521MiB/s
Size=1024MiB Duration=1.5s Speed=668.85MiB/s
Which is just as fast as dd
:
time dd if=/dev/zero of=test.file bs=1024 count=0 seek=1048576
real 0m1.539s
user 0m0.001s
sys 0m0.344s