[please continue to CC me]
Thank you for your reply:
also sprach Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> [2002.12.19.1843 +0100]:
> Your disk is too slow for the work being asked of it, thats all.
> Eventually it'll get there
Alan, I am in no position to doubt what you say, but I can't imagine
that. Sure, maybe the 5,400 RPM one, but not the 7,200 RPM one.
The reason why I am saying this is twofold and empirical:
- When the above occurs, the system in question might not be doing
anything. My example with /usr/sbin/sendmail in a while loop is
hardcore stresstesting. I have had the problem with no users on
the system, no requests being served by the servers (ifconfig
down), just two ssh connections, one displaying top, the other
opening a Maildir folder of 1,000 messages with mutt. I really
don't (want to) believe that a system with these specs can't
handle that.
- I have another system with exactly the same specs (AMD K6 Duron
1.2 GHz, 512 MB, 7,200 HDD) that is happy doing all of the
following at the same time
* compiling a kernel
* streaming local MP3s to three other computers
* being used intensely through X (it's my main computer).
In fact, to verify this, I told the system to also check and
update tripwire while I was additionally running the slocate
updater. Other than the interactive use, these activities are
very tough on the disk, and yet I see no 'D' processes.
In any case, loading up mutt on a Maildir folder of 1,000 messages
should not take seven Minutes. If it does, there must be heavy usage
of the disk from another source. If top doesn't show anything, what
other tool could I use to see what processes are accessing the
harddrive? Is there something like a disk monitor for Linux, which
registers every request to the HDD like there is for Windoze
(http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/freeware/diskmon.shtml)?
> > My laptop, which is running Debian testing/unstable is not showing
> > this behaviour, and its load goes far higher at times. I also run
> > various other servers, partially on P5-120 systems, vanilla 2.4.xx
> > kernels and Debian testing, and there are no such problems there.
>=20
> sendmail tuning ?
postfix... but no. All my machines have identical postfix
configurations, and, as mentioned above, the problem is not only
triggered when postfix is active...
Thank you for your time!
[please continue to CC me]
--=20
.''`. martin f. krafft <madduck@debian.org>
: :' : proud Debian developer, admin, and user
`. `'`
`- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
=20
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