I used Openoffice spreadsheet graphs rather than the graphics package that came with filebench at the time (I cannot remember which that was: gplot maybe) because with _some_ filesystems it is hard to generate deterministic results from one run - so you need multiple runs to create averages. It was just easier to tabulate a lot of data in the end with a spreadsheet. One of my self-imposed goals was that the reader could reproduce the results and Filebench/Openoffice fitted with that. I would have liked to have used R ( http://www.r-project.org/ ) but the learning curve was not compatible with the fact I was being paid by the hour at that time.
cheers Dominic 2010/1/31 Richard Elling <richard.ell...@gmail.com> > On Jan 31, 2010, at 5:09 AM, Henrik Johansson wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > Is there any easy way to generate comparison graphs from filebench these > days? I know that xanadu was used in earlier version, but its not bundled > and I found no information on resent support for this. > > > > I'm looking for something like the graphs presented by Dominic Kay[1], > sure I could probably import the numbers into some workd processor, but I > would like something finished, easy, if available. > > IIRC, the Xanudu project was open sourced under the name Fenxi. > https://fenxi.dev.java.net/ > > > > > 1.http://blogs.sun.com/dom/entry/filebench:_a_zfs_v_vxfs > > Those look like OpenOffice graphs (with the default colors). > -- richard > > _______________________________________________ > perf-discuss mailing list > perf-discuss@opensolaris.org > -- Dominic Kay +44 780 124 6099
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