Managing NFS and NIS
An Analysis of Database-Driven Mail Servers
LISA '03 Proceedings of the 17th USENIX conference on System administration
Passive NFS Tracing of Email and Research Workloads
FAST '03 Proceedings of the 2nd USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies
A comparison of file system workloads
ATEC '00 Proceedings of the annual conference on USENIX Annual Technical Conference
TBBT: scalable and accurate trace replay for file server evaluation
SIGMETRICS '05 Proceedings of the 2005 ACM SIGMETRICS international conference on Measurement and modeling of computer systems
Tracefs: A File System to Trace Them All
FAST '04 Proceedings of the 3rd USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies
Extending ACID semantics to the file system
ACM Transactions on Storage (TOS)
Analysis and evolution of journaling file systems
ATEC '05 Proceedings of the annual conference on USENIX Annual Technical Conference
Grave Robbers from outer space using 9P2000 under Linux
ATEC '05 Proceedings of the annual conference on USENIX Annual Technical Conference
TBBT: scalable and accurate trace replay for file server evaluation
FAST'05 Proceedings of the 4th conference on USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies - Volume 4
Accurate and efficient replaying of file system traces
FAST'05 Proceedings of the 4th conference on USENIX Conference on File and Storage Technologies - Volume 4
Operating system profiling via latency analysis
OSDI '06 Proceedings of the 7th symposium on Operating systems design and implementation
A nine year study of file system and storage benchmarking
ACM Transactions on Storage (TOS)
Capture, conversion, and analysis of an intense NFS workload
FAST '09 Proccedings of the 7th conference on File and storage technologies
Tracking back references in a write-anywhere file system
FAST'10 Proceedings of the 8th USENIX conference on File and storage technologies
Discovery of application workloads from network file traces
FAST'10 Proceedings of the 8th USENIX conference on File and storage technologies
Tracefs: a file system to trace them all
FAST'04 Proceedings of the 3rd USENIX conference on File and storage technologies
A file is not a file: understanding the I/O behavior of Apple desktop applications
SOSP '11 Proceedings of the Twenty-Third ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles
Minimizing metadata access latency in wide area networked file systems
HiPC'06 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on High Performance Computing
A File Is Not a File: Understanding the I/O Behavior of Apple Desktop Applications
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
Predictive File Replication on the Data Grids
International Journal of Grid and High Performance Computing
Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles
ACM SIGOPS 24th Symposium on Operating Systems Principles
ROOT: replaying multithreaded traces with resource-oriented ordering
Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles
Active and accelerated learning of cost models for optimizing scientific applications
VLDB '06 Proceedings of the 32nd international conference on Very large data bases
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Passive NFS traces provide an easy and unobtrusive way to measure, analyze, and gain an understanding of an NFS workload. Historically, such traces have been used primarily by file system researchers in an attempt to understand, categorize, and generalize file system workloads. However, because such traces provide a wealth of detailed information about how a specific system is actually used, they should also be of interest to system administrators. We introduce a new open-source toolkit for passively gathering and summarizing NFS traces and show how to use this toolkit to perform analyses that are difficult or impossible with existing tools.