system, I was looking into the
availability of open-source stress testing tools. Turns out that there
is one in the Fedora distribution, aptly named "stress".
A web search turned up a number of "best of" articles, none of which
mentioned the Fedora "stress" tool.
Any opi
On Wed, 31 May 2023 17:01:15 -0400
Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> $ dnf search stress
> Fedora 38 OpenH264 (from Cisco) - x86_644.9 kB/s | 2.5 kB
> 00:00 stress.x86_64 : A tool to put given subsystems under a
> specified load stress-ng.x86_64 : Stress test a computer system in
> various ways str
On Wed, May 31, 2023 at 4:51 PM Geoffrey Leach wrote:
>
> In anticipation of the arrival of a new system, I was looking into the
> availability of open-source stress testing tools. Turns out that there
> is one in the Fedora distribution, aptly named "stress".
What are
In anticipation of the arrival of a new system, I was looking into the
availability of open-source stress testing tools. Turns out that there
is one in the Fedora distribution, aptly named "stress".
A web search turned up a number of "best of" articles, none of which
mentione
are my notes:
>
> === stress_testing_hardware.txt =====
> Stress Testing Hardware by Repeatedly Compiling the Linux Kernel
>
>
> * Install the Kernel Source
> # cd /var/tmp/
> # wget htt
are my notes:
=== stress_testing_hardware.txt =====
Stress Testing Hardware by Repeatedly Compiling the Linux Kernel
* Install the Kernel Source
# cd /var/tmp/
# wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/
I know memtest is on Fedora.
What about cpu tests?
Was goolging came up with cpuburn as per:
http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/1/diagnose-hardware-problems-with-an-ubuntu-live-cd/
--
Regards,
Frank
"Jack of all, fubars"
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