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From: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
To: cluster-devel.redhat.com
Subject: [Cluster-devel] Re: Why the gfs2 performance regressed?
Date: Wed, 02 Jan 2008 16:52:03 +0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <1199292723.22038.47.camel@quoit> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <91b13c310801020844t8cd24aard6edb7aaf1110a0c@mail.gmail.com>

Hi,

On Thu, 2008-01-03 at 00:44 +0800, Cheng Renquan wrote:
> On Jan 2, 2008 6:19 PM, Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com> wrote:
> > Are you running single node? if so then use lock_nolock rather than
> > lock_dlm as it will be much faster for fcntl locks. Even if you intend
> > to run as a cluster eventually, a single node comparison against
> > lock_nolock would be useful to try and eliminate some possibilities,
> No, I'm using a two nodes environment, the /mnt/gfs2 are gfs2 mounting
> points on both two nodes, and they are both samba shared folders.
> And in fact, the two nodes are using a clustered LVM from the same
> iSCSI device, so dlm would be the only lock manager?
> 
> Actually What I cannot explain is merely that the only difference with
> the kernel: from 2.6.18-53.el5 (stocked with RHEL51) to latest
> gfs2-nmw.git, I don't know why.
> 

There was a performance regression with the -nmw tree relating to a set
of patches which I removed from the tree this morning. That would make
it slower, but not by the amount that you are seeing, and also it would
affect only "normal" I/O and not fcntl locks.

Is there a point in the history of the  -nmw git tree which you know is
ok? Perhaps it would be possible to bisect the tree to find the problem
patch?

Steve.




  reply	other threads:[~2008-01-02 16:52 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
     [not found] <91b13c310801012353i2f57a6c4o884b3e9aeab5970a@mail.gmail.com>
2008-01-02 10:19 ` [Cluster-devel] Re: Why the gfs2 performance regressed? Steven Whitehouse
2008-01-02 16:44   ` Cheng Renquan
2008-01-02 16:52     ` Steven Whitehouse [this message]
2008-01-03  7:27       ` Denis Cheng
2008-01-03  9:36         ` Denis Cheng
2008-01-07  9:48           ` rae l
2008-01-07 11:48             ` Steven Whitehouse
2008-01-08  7:38               ` rae l
2008-01-08  9:01                 ` Steven Whitehouse
2008-01-09 10:12                   ` rae l

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