

Cross Platform Disk Test
Measuring storage performance (SSD, HDD, USB Flash etc.) and RAM speed across Windows, macOS, Linux and Android devices. Random and sequential throughput (read/write operations) is calculted in MB/s and can be compared in consistent and reliable manner between mobile and desktop...
Cost / License
- Free
- Open Source
Alerts
- Discontinued
Platforms
- Mac
- Windows
- Linux
- Android
The latest version (2.4.0) was released in March 2023.
Features
- Portable
- Benchmark
Cross Platform Disk Test News & Activities
Recent News
Recent activities
- dudo updated Cross Platform Disk Test
- needmoremusic reviewed Cross Platform Disk Test
Working alternative to CrystalDiskMark on Linux - works straight up after unpacking, unlike some other highly upvoted alts I could mention.
Seems quite professional as it posts min and max disk speed values, not just averages, plus it also does a "memory copy" test, which I'm assuming is a self-to-self copy, pretty nice one to include, should become standard in those other tools.
Can't say if it's exactly equivalent to what CrystalDiskMark would show as the disk I'm trying to bench isn't...
What is Cross Platform Disk Test?
Measuring storage performance (SSD, HDD, USB Flash etc.) and RAM speed across Windows, macOS, Linux and Android devices. Random and sequential throughput (read/write operations) is calculted in MB/s and can be compared in consistent and reliable manner between mobile and desktop platfotms and devices.






Comments and Reviews
Cross platform tools are required when comparing benchs on differents OS
Working alternative to CrystalDiskMark on Linux - works straight up after unpacking, unlike some other highly upvoted alts I could mention.
Seems quite professional as it posts min and max disk speed values, not just averages, plus it also does a "memory copy" test, which I'm assuming is a self-to-self copy, pretty nice one to include, should become standard in those other tools.
Can't say if it's exactly equivalent to what CrystalDiskMark would show as the disk I'm trying to bench isn't recognized on Win10.
It tells you what you need to know and doesn't ask anything of you