#
# spec file for package stress-ng
#
# Copyright (c) 2018 SUSE LINUX GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
# Copyright (c) 2015, Martin Hauke <mardnh@gmx.de>
#
# All modifications and additions to the file contributed by third parties
# remain the property of their copyright owners, unless otherwise agreed
# upon. The license for this file, and modifications and additions to the
# file, is the same license as for the pristine package itself (unless the
# license for the pristine package is not an Open Source License, in which
# case the license is the MIT License). An "Open Source License" is a
# license that conforms to the Open Source Definition (Version 1.9)
# published by the Open Source Initiative.

# Please submit bugfixes or comments via http://bugs.opensuse.org/
#


Name:           stress-ng
Version:        0.09.32
Release:        0
Summary:        Tool to load and stress a computer
License:        GPL-2.0-only
Group:          System/Benchmark
URL:            http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~cking/stress-ng/
Source:         http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~cking/tarballs/%{name}/%{name}-%{version}.tar.xz
BuildRequires:  keyutils-devel
BuildRequires:  libaio-devel
BuildRequires:  libattr-devel
BuildRequires:  libbsd-devel
BuildRequires:  libcap-devel
BuildRequires:  libseccomp-devel
BuildRequires:  lksctp-tools-devel
BuildRequires:  zlib-devel

%description
stress-ng can stress various subsystems of a computer. It can stress load CPU,
cache, disk, memory, socket and pipe I/O, scheduling and much more. stress-ng
is a re-write of the original stress tool by Amos Waterland but has many
additional features such as specifying the number of bogo operations to run,
execution metrics, a stress verification on memory and compute operations and
considerably more stress mechanisms.

%prep
%setup -q

%build
export CFLAGS="%{optflags}"
make %{?_smp_mflags}

%install
install -D -p -m 0755 stress-ng   \
  %{buildroot}%{_bindir}/stress-ng
install -D -p -m 0644 stress-ng.1 \
  %{buildroot}%{_mandir}/man1/stress-ng.1

%files
%license COPYING
%doc README
%{_bindir}/stress-ng
%{_mandir}/man1/stress-ng.1%{ext_man}

%changelog