Re: Linux MD RAID 5 Benchmarks Across (3 to 10) 300 Gigabyte Veliciraptors

From: thomas62186218
Date: Mon Jun 09 2008 - 03:51:44 EST


Thank you for sharing these results. One issue that I consistently see with these results is miserable random IO performance. Looking at these numbers, even a low-end RAID controller with 128MB of cache will outrun md-based RAIDs in random IO benchmarks. In today's world of virtual machines, etc, random IO is far more common than sequential IO. What can be done with md (or something else) to alleviate this problem?

-Thomas


-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx>
To: Justin Piszcz <jpiszcz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-raid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx; Alan Piszcz <ap@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sat, 7 Jun 2008 6:46 pm
Subject: Re: Linux MD RAID 5 Benchmarks Across (3 to 10) 300 Gigabyte Veliciraptors










On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 7:22 AM, Justin Piszcz <jpiszcz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
First, the original benchmarks with 6-SATA drives with fixed
formatting,
using
right justification and the same decimal point precision throughout:

http://home.comcast.net/~jpiszcz/20080607/raid-benchmarks-decimal-fix-and-right-justified/disks.html

Now for for veliciraptors! Ever wonder what kind of speed is
possible with
3 disk, 4,5,6,7,8,9,10-disk RAID5s? I ran a loop to find out, each
run is
executed three times and the average is taken of all three runs per
each
RAID5 disk set.

In short? The 965 no longer does justice with faster drives, a new
chipset
and motherboard are needed. After reading or writing to 4-5
veliciraptors
it saturates the bus/965 chipset.

Here is a picture of the 12 veliciraptors I tested with:

http://home.comcast.net/~jpiszcz/20080607/raid5-benchmarks-3to10-veliciraptors/raptors.jpg

Here are the bonnie++ results:

http://home.comcast.net/~jpiszcz/20080607/raid5-benchmarks-3to10-veliciraptors/veliciraptor-raid.html

For those who want the results in text:

http://home.comcast.net/~jpiszcz/20080607/raid5-benchmarks-3to10-veliciraptors/veliciraptor-raid.txt

System used, same/similar as before:
Motherboard: Intel DG965WH
Memory: 8GiB
Kernel: 2.6.25.4
Distribution: Debian Testing x86_64
Filesystem: XFS with default mkfs.xfs parameters [auto-optimized for
SW
RAID]
Mount options: defaults,noatime,nodiratime,logbufs=8,logbsize=262144
0 1
Chunk size: 1024KiB
RAID5 Layout: Default (left-symmetric)
Mdadm Superblock used: 0.90

Optimizations used (last one is for the CFQ scheduler), it improves
performance by a modest 5-10MiB/s:
http://home.comcast.net/~jpiszcz/raid/20080601/raid5.html

# Tell user what's going on.
echo "Optimizing RAID Arrays..."

# Define DISKS.
cd /sys/block
DISKS=$(/bin/ls -1d sd[a-z])

# Set read-ahead.
# > That's actually 65k x 512byte blocks so 32MiB
echo "Setting read-ahead to 32 MiB for /dev/md3"
blockdev --setra 65536 /dev/md3

# Set stripe-cache_size for RAID5.
echo "Setting stripe_cache_size to 16 MiB for /dev/md3"

Sorry to sound like a broken record, 16MiB is not correct.

size=$((num_disks * 4 * 16384 / 1024))
echo "Setting stripe_cache_size to $size MiB for /dev/md3"

...and commit 8b3e6cdc should improve the performance / stripe_cache_size ratio.

echo 16384 > /sys/block/md3/md/stripe_cache_size

# Disable NCQ on all disks.
echo "Disabling NCQ on all disks..."
for i in $DISKS
do
echo "Disabling NCQ on $i"
echo 1 > /sys/block/"$i"/device/queue_depth
done

# Fix slice_idle.
# See http://www.nextre.it/oracledocs/ioscheduler_03.html
echo "Fixing slice_idle to 0..."
for i in $DISKS
do
echo "Changing slice_idle to 0 on $i"
echo 0 > /sys/block/"$i"/queue/iosched/slice_idle
done


Thanks for putting this data together.

Regards,
Dan
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