* [linux-lvm] Test of LVM @ 2001-05-26 12:35 Peter Kirk 2001-05-26 15:49 ` Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez 2001-05-26 16:40 ` [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Andreas Dilger 0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Peter Kirk @ 2001-05-26 12:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm Hi, I have two disks in one Logical Volume, and all "Partitions" in the LV are striped over the disks, the two disks are both: Maxtor 5T0T2H2 with 20 GB a piece, when I do hdparm -t /dev/hda (or hdb) gives ~36MB/sec Now I would like to know, how to test if my LVM is performing as it should, could you please tell me what to do, and how to interprete the nubers I get ? I think it will not as simple as saying 36 + 36 = 72MB/sec, but it should be somewhere there, shouldn`t it ? thanks in advance pwk ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM 2001-05-26 12:35 [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Peter Kirk @ 2001-05-26 15:49 ` Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez 2001-05-27 2:56 ` System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) Peter Kirk 2001-05-26 16:40 ` [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Andreas Dilger 1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez @ 2001-05-26 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm On Saturday, 26 May 2001, at 14:35:45 +0200, Peter Kirk wrote: > Hi, > > I have two disks in one Logical Volume, and all "Partitions" in the LV are > striped over the disks, the two disks are both: > I suppose you mean "a VG consiting of the two disks, with LV created with --stripe=2, that is like a RAID-0 would do" :) > Now I would like to know, how to test if my LVM is performing as it should, > [...] > Depending on what you want to test, you can use several methods/tools ranging from dd'ing data in and out, recursive copying, hdparm, bonnie, bonnie++ and mongo. Check http://bulma.lug.net/static to see some filesystem-oriented test you could try. Mu (little) experience with stripped LVs is that throughput is quite lower that the achieved with kernel's software RAID-0: the latter achieved nearly the sum of the disks's R/W KB/s, while stripped LVs performance felt quite behind. But this was a _very_ simple test with a Pentium75 machine, with 16 MB RAM and two disks, 400 MB one and 800 MB the other (tested with bonnie). So results can be far from true under more realistic setups :). Regards. -- Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez Linux Registered User #189436 Debian GNU/Linux Potato (P166 64 MB RAM) jdomingo EN internautas PUNTO org => � Spam ? Atente a las consecuencias jdomingo AT internautas DOT org => Spam at your own risk ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) 2001-05-26 15:49 ` Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez @ 2001-05-27 2:56 ` Peter Kirk 2001-05-27 7:43 ` Dominique LARCHEY-WENDLING 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Peter Kirk @ 2001-05-27 2:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm This is what bonnie gives me Am Samstag, 26. Mai 2001 17:49 schrieben Sie: > On Saturday, 26 May 2001, at 14:35:45 +0200, > > Peter Kirk wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I have two disks in one Logical Volume, and all "Partitions" in the LV > > are striped over the disks, the two disks are both: > > I suppose you mean "a VG consiting of the two disks, with LV created with > --stripe=2, that is like a RAID-0 would do" :) I have no idea of what I mean, in the setup with SuSE`s installer (yast) there was this place to set the stripe option, which I set to two. > > > Now I would like to know, how to test if my LVM is performing as it > > should, [...] > > Depending on what you want to test, you can use several methods/tools > ranging from dd'ing data in and out, recursive copying, hdparm, bonnie, > bonnie++ and mongo. Check http://bulma.lug.net/static to see some > filesystem-oriented test you could try. I tried bonnie, is this result what I should have expected ? root@notch:/home/pwk > bonnie -s 1024MB Bonnie 1.2: File './Bonnie.2815', size: 1073741824, volumes: 1 Writing with putc()... done: 3270 kB/s 35.4 %CPU Rewriting... done: 1505 kB/s 19.3 %CPU Writing intelligently... done: 4682 kB/s 11.4 %CPU [I stopped bonnie here, do you need more output ?] I don't know what this test does, but surely more than 3MB/sec of writing performance should be ?? I'm not certain if this problem I am about to describe is LVM specific, but I think that the most propable cause: When I do e.g. a run of bonnie (-> My disks have work to do), the entire System goes *extremly* slow (each key hit takes about 1sec to apear on the terminal, from the command top to the coming up of the ascii chart there is a time gap of ~20sec...) As Andreas Dilger pointed out, I can't have to disks on one Controler doing things simultanously. Might this somehow be the reason why my systems snails on disk usage ? There is something I tested in such times of slowness, and that is the output of top top [normal running system + X + KDE] 319 root 17 0 196M 196M 2352 S 0.7 39.2 6:33 X 2586 pwk 12 0 12856 12M 11092 S 0.1 2.5 0:43 kdeinit 2887 root 16 0 980 980 764 R 0.1 0.1 0:00 top 1 root 9 0 216 216 180 S 0.0 0.0 0:07 init 2 root 9 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:00 keventd 3 root 9 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:35 kswapd 4 root 9 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:00 kreclaimd 5 root 9 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:14 bdflush 6 root 9 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:07 kupdated top [system with bonnie running] 2815 root 17 0 544 544 440 R 37.5 0.1 4:50 bonnie 319 root 16 0 196M 196M 2352 R 15.4 39.2 6:01 X 2599 pwk 15 0 19344 18M 12580 S 12.5 3.7 1:58 kmail 2189 pwk 10 0 11540 11M 7048 S 9.9 2.2 3:21 kmix 865 pwk 9 0 3168 3168 2272 S 1.7 0.6 0:53 artsd 896 pwk 9 0 11436 11M 10220 S 1.1 2.2 1:29 kdeinit 893 pwk 9 0 14448 14M 12344 S 0.9 2.8 1:03 kdeinit 2885 pwk 12 0 980 980 764 R 0.7 0.1 0:00 top 891 pwk 10 0 14916 14M 12904 S 0.1 2.9 0:40 kdeinit 2586 pwk 9 0 12840 12M 11076 S 0.1 2.5 0:42 kdeinit 1 root 9 0 216 216 180 S 0.0 0.0 0:07 init As you see, all processes seam to take much more CPU time when bonnie is running [noting that I am not using any of the programms activly, there are only running]. I would realy love to get rid of this problem, so please help. If you think I should try one of my HD on the second controler, could you please give me some hints of how not to destroy my linux system by doing this (where do I have to change things) > > My (little) experience with stripped LVs is that throughput is quite lower > that the achieved with kernel's software RAID-0: the latter achieved > nearly the sum of the disks's R/W KB/s, while stripped LVs performance > felt quite behind. > > But this was a _very_ simple test with a Pentium75 machine, with 16 MB RAM > and two disks, 400 MB one and 800 MB the other (tested with bonnie). So > results can be far from true under more realistic setups :). > Can anybody comment on the speed difference between softraid0 and LVM ? Thank you in advance ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) 2001-05-27 2:56 ` System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) Peter Kirk @ 2001-05-27 7:43 ` Dominique LARCHEY-WENDLING 2001-05-27 13:33 ` Peter Kirk 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Dominique LARCHEY-WENDLING @ 2001-05-27 7:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm > root@notch:/home/pwk > bonnie -s 1024MB > Bonnie 1.2: File './Bonnie.2815', size: 1073741824, volumes: 1 > Writing with putc()... done: 3270 kB/s 35.4 %CPU > Rewriting... done: 1505 kB/s 19.3 %CPU > Writing intelligently... done: 4682 kB/s 11.4 %CPU > [I stopped bonnie here, do you need more output ?] Is DMA set on your harddrive ? (hdparm) DL -- Dominique Larchey LORIA, Nancy, France Tel. (Work) +33 (0) 3 83 59 20 13 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) 2001-05-27 7:43 ` Dominique LARCHEY-WENDLING @ 2001-05-27 13:33 ` Peter Kirk 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Peter Kirk @ 2001-05-27 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm Am Sonntag, 27. Mai 2001 09:43 schrieben Sie: > > root@notch:/home/pwk > bonnie -s 1024MB > > Bonnie 1.2: File './Bonnie.2815', size: 1073741824, volumes: 1 > > Writing with putc()... done: 3270 kB/s 35.4 %CPU > > Rewriting... done: 1505 kB/s 19.3 %CPU > > Writing intelligently... done: 4682 kB/s 11.4 %CPU > > [I stopped bonnie here, do you need more output ?] > > Is DMA set on your harddrive ? (hdparm) > > DL Yes I thought it was enabled, until I checked. hda had it enabled, and hdb had not :-( Here is the new bonnie root@notch:/home/pwk > bonnie -s 512 Bonnie 1.2: File './Bonnie.651', size: 536870912, volumes: 1 Writing with putc()... done: 13874 kB/s 98.1 %CPU Rewriting... done: 10629 kB/s 6.0 %CPU Writing intelligently... done: 107497 kB/s 93.1 %CPU Reading with getc()... done: 11554 kB/s 75.6 %CPU Reading intelligently... done: 52766 kB/s 24.3 %CPU Seeker 1...Seeker 2...Seeker 3...start 'em...done...done...done... ---Sequential Output (nosync)--- ---Sequential Input-- --Rnd Seek- -Per Char- --Block--- -Rewrite-- -Per Char- --Block--- --04k (03)-Machine MB K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU /sec %CPUnotch 1* 512 13874 98.1107497 93.1 10629 6.0 11554 75.6 52766 24.3 279.6 1.0 So... is this appropriate for two fast disks ? 10MB/sec are much better, but I was thing of 40 or 50 MB/sec. Am I doing anything wrong ? pwk.linuxfan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM 2001-05-26 12:35 [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Peter Kirk 2001-05-26 15:49 ` Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez @ 2001-05-26 16:40 ` Andreas Dilger 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Andreas Dilger @ 2001-05-26 16:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm Peter Kirk writes: > I have two disks in one Logical Volume, and all "Partitions" in the LV are > striped over the disks, the two disks are both: > Maxtor 5T0T2H2 with 20 GB a piece, when I do > hdparm -t /dev/hda (or hdb) gives ~36MB/sec > > Now I would like to know, how to test if my LVM is performing as it should, > could you please tell me what to do, and how to interprete the nubers I get ? > I think it will not as simple as saying 36 + 36 = 72MB/sec, but it should be > somewhere there, shouldn`t it ? Not even close. IDE master/slave drives cannot do I/O at the same time, so your hda+hdb setup is broken. You will be lucky to get even the performance of a single drive like this. Why do people want to do striping anyways??? You have 36MB/s and you will almost never even be able to use that up. Striping will just mean that both disks are always busy at the same time. If you had separate filesystems on the different drives, you could at least do copies between the two drives or write to /tmp and /usr/src/linux at some reasonable speed. If you have striping, then you will be seeking like crazy instead. You ALSO have the good luck that if either drive goes bad you lose ALL of your data. The ONLY reason to do striping is if you NEED > 36MB streaming I/O speed for some reason (I don't think even real-time video needs that performance). Cheers, Andreas -- Andreas Dilger \ "If a man ate a pound of pasta and a pound of antipasto, \ would they cancel out, leaving him still hungry?" http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/ -- Dogbert ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2001-05-27 13:33 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2001-05-26 12:35 [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Peter Kirk 2001-05-26 15:49 ` Jos� Luis Domingo L�pez 2001-05-27 2:56 ` System goes very slow (was: Re: [linux-lvm] Test of LVM) Peter Kirk 2001-05-27 7:43 ` Dominique LARCHEY-WENDLING 2001-05-27 13:33 ` Peter Kirk 2001-05-26 16:40 ` [linux-lvm] Test of LVM Andreas Dilger
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