0.33.2
bup-random - generate a stream of random output
bup random [-S seed] [-fv] <numbytes>
bup random
produces a stream of pseudorandom output
bytes to stdout. Note: the bytes are not generated using a
cryptographic algorithm and should never be used for security.
Note that the stream of random bytes will be identical every time
bup random
is run, unless you provide a different
seed
value. This is intentional: the purpose of this
program is to be able to run repeatable tests on large amounts of data,
so we want identical data every time.
bup random
generates about 240 megabytes per second on a
modern test system (Intel Core2), which is faster than you could achieve
by reading data from most disks. Thus, it can be helpful when running
microbenchmarks.
k
, M
, or G
to indicate kilobytes,
megabytes, or gigabytes, respectively.
$ bup random 1k | sha1sum
2108c55d0a2687c8dacf9192677c58437a55db71 -
$ bup random -S1 1k | sha1sum
2108c55d0a2687c8dacf9192677c58437a55db71 -
$ bup random -S2 1k | sha1sum
f71acb90e135d98dad7efc136e8d2cc30573e71a -
$ time bup random 1G >/dev/null
Random: 1024 Mbytes, done.
real 0m4.261s
user 0m4.048s
sys 0m0.172s
$ bup random 1G | bup split -t --bench
Random: 1024 Mbytes, done.
bup: 1048576.00kbytes in 18.59 secs = 56417.78 kbytes/sec
1092599b9c7b2909652ef1e6edac0796bfbfc573
Part of the bup
(1) suite.