What do you mean?
That he should activate the write caching in all his drives?
I thought that was plain stupid and wrong, because the filesystem
expects journal data to hit the disk immedialtely. The journal
is written synchronously, isn't it?
So I would expect you to advise everybody to deactivate any
caching in drives and controllers. An the we are back with
Jimmie's question: the throughput performance of his drives
is bad, and the (theoretically) fastest drive is worst.
Regards,
Toon (running a newsserver with reiserfs-3.5.32 on top of LVM-0.9.1-beta7 on
top of DAC960 hardware RAID5 with write-caching turned off, using linux-2.2.19)
> Jimmie Mayfield wrote:
> >
> > Hi. I'm running into some disk throughput issues that I can't explain.
> > Hopefully someone reading this can offer an explanation.
> >
> > One of my machines is running 2.4.5 and has 2 hard drives: a 7200 rpm
> > ATA100 Maxtor and a 5400 rpm ATA33 IBM. Each drive is a master on its own
> > controller (AMI CMD649 as found on the IWill KT266-R). Both drives contain
> > reiserfs 3.6x filesystems.
> >
> > By all local benchmarks, the 7200 rpm drive is the faster drive. But this
> > doesn't seem to be the case for large files originating from remote clients.
> > Witness:
> >
> > My crude test involves scp'ing a 100MB file from another machine on my home
> > network over 100bT ethernet.
> >
> > 1) scp to the 5400rpm drive: roughly 10MB/sec.
> > 2) scp to the 7200rpm drive: roughly 2MB/sec.
> >
> > I've tried 'tail' and 'notail' mount options with no change (as expected since
> > this is a single large file). I suspect that the machine would become CPU-bound
> > somewhere in the 20MB/sec range (see below for my reasoning).
> >
> > I see the same sort of behavior using Samba though not nearly as
> > pronounced (the 5400rpm drive is merely 2x as fast as the 7200rpm drive).
> >
> > Okay. Since the test involved 2 separate drives with different geometries,
> > I figured this might be due to physical block location. Perhaps the file
> > is getting allocated to the fastest cylinders on the 5400 rpm drive and
> > the slowest cylinders on the 7200 rpm drive. Or it could be a fragmentation
> > issue.
> >
> > So I tried the test locally: with the file stored on the 5400rpm drive,
> > scp it to localhost and write it to the 7200rpm drive. Results were a little
> > below 10MB/sec (CPU near 100% presumably due to encrypting/decrypting on
> > the fly).
> >
> > Any ideas why the 7200rpm drive performs so poorly for remote clients but
> > performs wonderfully well when those same operations are performed locally?
> >
> > Jimmie
> >
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