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OSBench.exe (Windows Embedded CE 6.0)

1/6/2010

OSBench.exe enables you to collect timing samples to measure the performance of the kernel by conducting scheduler performance-timing tests. A scheduler performance-timing test measures how much time is required for a basic kernel operation, such as synchronization. An example of synchronization is scheduling a thread that is waiting on an event that has just been set by another thread. Wherever appropriate, the test runs two sets of metrics: thread-to-thread within a process, and thread-to-thread across processes. If appropriate, you can apply a stress suite while running the test.

OSBench enables you to determine how long it takes to perform the following tasks:

  • Acquire or release a critical section.
  • Wait or signal an event.
  • Create a semaphore or mutex.
  • Yield a thread.
  • Call system APIs.

You can use the following command-line parameters with this tool.

osbench [-all] [-t test_case] [-list] [-v] [-n number] [-m address]
[-o file_name] [-h]

The following table shows the command-line parameters used with OSBench.exe.

Command-line parameter Description

-all

Runs all tests. The default setting is to run only those specified by the -t parameter.

-t test_case

Specifies the identifier of the test case to run. A separate -t parameter is required for each test.

-list

Lists test identifiers with descriptions.

-v

Indicates verbose output or to show all measurements. The default setting is to show summary output only.

-n number

Specifies the number of samples per test. The default setting is 100.

-m address

Specifies the virtual address to write marker values. The default setting is none.

-o file_name

Sends output to a comma-separated file. The default setting is to send the output to a debugger message window.

-h

Displays a Help screen.

See Also

Concepts

Real-Time Measurement Tools

Other Resources

OSBench Support