* who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs?
@ 2017-11-08 21:41 Sage Weil
2017-11-08 21:52 ` Wyllys Ingersoll
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Sage Weil @ 2017-11-08 21:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: ceph-users, ceph-devel
Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your
experience been?
(We are working on building proper testing and support for this into
Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.)
Thanks!
sage
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-08 21:41 who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? Sage Weil @ 2017-11-08 21:52 ` Wyllys Ingersoll 2017-11-08 21:53 ` [ceph-users] " Marc Roos [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Wyllys Ingersoll @ 2017-11-08 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil; +Cc: Ceph-User, Ceph Development We use Ganesha (currently version 2.5.2) for exporting cephfs subdirectories over NFS, but we have been using the VFS FSAL as opposed to the ceph one due to problems encountered in the past. Im not sure if the past issues have been resolved or not. It would be good to know with some confidence if the ceph FSAL is production ready, so proper testing would be great. Wyllys Ingersoll Keeper Technology, LLC On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 4:41 PM, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > Thanks! > sage > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* RE: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-08 21:41 who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? Sage Weil 2017-11-08 21:52 ` Wyllys Ingersoll @ 2017-11-08 21:53 ` Marc Roos [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Marc Roos @ 2017-11-08 21:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ceph-devel, ceph-users, sweil I, in test environment, centos7, on a luminous osd node, with binaries from download.ceph.com::ceph/nfs-ganesha/rpm-V2.5-stable/luminous/x86_64/ Having these: Nov 6 17:41:34 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[31113]: segfault at 0 ip 00007fa80a151a43 sp 00007fa755ffa2f0 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fa80a12b000+46000] Nov 6 17:41:34 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[31113]: segfault at 0 ip 00007fa80a151a43 sp 00007fa755ffa2f0 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fa80a12b000+46000] Nov 6 17:42:16 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[6839]: segfault at 8 ip 00007fc97a5d3f98 sp 00007fc8c6ffc2f8 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fc97a5ac000+46000] Nov 6 17:42:16 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[6839]: segfault at 8 ip 00007fc97a5d3f98 sp 00007fc8c6ffc2f8 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fc97a5ac000+46000] Nov 6 17:47:47 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[7662]: segfault at 4 ip 00007f15e2afc060 sp 00007f152effc388 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f15e2ad6000+46000] Nov 6 17:47:47 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[7662]: segfault at 4 ip 00007f15e2afc060 sp 00007f152effc388 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f15e2ad6000+46000] Nov 6 17:52:25 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[14415]: segfault at 88 ip 00007f9258eed453 sp 00007f91a9ff2348 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f9258eda000+46000] Nov 6 17:52:25 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[14415]: segfault at 88 ip 00007f9258eed453 sp 00007f91a9ff2348 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f9258eda000+46000] And reported this https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/215 -----Original Message----- From: Sage Weil [mailto:sweil@redhat.com] Sent: woensdag 8 november 2017 22:42 To: ceph-users@ceph.com; ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org Subject: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your experience been? (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) Thanks! sage _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list ceph-users@lists.ceph.com http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org>]
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> @ 2017-11-08 21:53 ` Marc Roos 2017-11-08 22:42 ` Lincoln Bryant ` (3 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Marc Roos @ 2017-11-08 21:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ceph-devel, ceph-users, sweil I, in test environment, centos7, on a luminous osd node, with binaries from download.ceph.com::ceph/nfs-ganesha/rpm-V2.5-stable/luminous/x86_64/ Having these: Nov 6 17:41:34 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[31113]: segfault at 0 ip 00007fa80a151a43 sp 00007fa755ffa2f0 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fa80a12b000+46000] Nov 6 17:41:34 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[31113]: segfault at 0 ip 00007fa80a151a43 sp 00007fa755ffa2f0 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fa80a12b000+46000] Nov 6 17:42:16 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[6839]: segfault at 8 ip 00007fc97a5d3f98 sp 00007fc8c6ffc2f8 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fc97a5ac000+46000] Nov 6 17:42:16 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[6839]: segfault at 8 ip 00007fc97a5d3f98 sp 00007fc8c6ffc2f8 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7fc97a5ac000+46000] Nov 6 17:47:47 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[7662]: segfault at 4 ip 00007f15e2afc060 sp 00007f152effc388 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f15e2ad6000+46000] Nov 6 17:47:47 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[7662]: segfault at 4 ip 00007f15e2afc060 sp 00007f152effc388 error 6 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f15e2ad6000+46000] Nov 6 17:52:25 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[14415]: segfault at 88 ip 00007f9258eed453 sp 00007f91a9ff2348 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f9258eda000+46000] Nov 6 17:52:25 c01 kernel: ganesha.nfsd[14415]: segfault at 88 ip 00007f9258eed453 sp 00007f91a9ff2348 error 4 in libdbus-1.so.3.7.4[7f9258eda000+46000] And reported this https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/215 -----Original Message----- From: Sage Weil [mailto:sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org] Sent: woensdag 8 november 2017 22:42 To: ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ@public.gmane.org; ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org Subject: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your experience been? (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) Thanks! sage _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list ceph-users-idqoXFIVOFJgJs9I8MT0rw@public.gmane.org http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> 2017-11-08 21:53 ` Marc Roos @ 2017-11-08 22:42 ` Lincoln Bryant 2017-11-09 7:10 ` Wido den Hollander ` (2 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Lincoln Bryant @ 2017-11-08 22:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil; +Cc: ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ Hi Sage, We have been running the Ganesha FSAL for a while (as far back as Hammer / Ganesha 2.2.0), primarily for uid/gid squashing. Things are basically OK for our application, but we've seen the following weirdness*: - Sometimes there are duplicated entries when directories are listed. Same filename, same inode, just shows up twice in 'ls'. - There can be a considerable latency between new files added to CephFS and those files becoming visible on our NFS clients. I understand this might be related to dentry caching. - Occasionally, the Ganesha FSAL seems to max out at 100,000 caps claimed which don't get released until the MDS is restarted. *note: these issues are with Ganesha 2.2.0 and Hammer/Jewel, and have perhaps since been fixed upstream. (We've recently updated to Luminous / Ganesha 2.5.2, and will be happy to complain if any issues show up :)) Cheers, Lincoln > On Nov 8, 2017, at 3:41 PM, Sage Weil <sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org> wrote: > > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > Thanks! > sage > > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list > ceph-users-idqoXFIVOFJgJs9I8MT0rw@public.gmane.org > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> 2017-11-08 21:53 ` Marc Roos 2017-11-08 22:42 ` Lincoln Bryant @ 2017-11-09 7:10 ` Wido den Hollander 2017-11-09 10:04 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree 2017-11-16 8:17 ` Rafael Lopez 4 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Wido den Hollander @ 2017-11-09 7:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ, Sage Weil, ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA > Op 8 november 2017 om 22:41 schreef Sage Weil <sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org>: > > > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > A customer of mine is going this. They are running Ubuntu and my experience is that getting Ganesha compiled is already a pain sometimes. When it runs it runs just fine. I don't hear a lot of complaints from their side with Ganesha or NFS not working. Wido > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > Thanks! > sage > > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list > ceph-users-idqoXFIVOFJgJs9I8MT0rw@public.gmane.org > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2017-11-09 7:10 ` Wido den Hollander @ 2017-11-09 10:04 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree [not found] ` <20171109100440.yut3qjvejxwd7oz3-IBi9RG/b67k@public.gmane.org> 2017-11-16 8:17 ` Rafael Lopez 4 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Lars Marowsky-Bree @ 2017-11-09 10:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil; +Cc: ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ On 2017-11-08T21:41:41, Sage Weil <sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org> wrote: > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) We use it currently, and it works, but let's not discuss the performance ;-) How else do you want to build this into Mimic? Regards, Lars -- SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) "Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes." -- Oscar Wilde ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <20171109100440.yut3qjvejxwd7oz3-IBi9RG/b67k@public.gmane.org>]
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <20171109100440.yut3qjvejxwd7oz3-IBi9RG/b67k@public.gmane.org> @ 2017-11-09 11:15 ` Supriti Singh 2017-11-09 13:21 ` Supriti Singh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Supriti Singh @ 2017-11-09 11:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA, Lars Marowsky-Bree Cc: ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2379 bytes --] Hi Sage, As Lars mentioned, at SUSE, we use ganesha 2.5.2/luminous. We did a preliminary performance comparison of cephfs client and nfs-ganesha client. I have attached the results. The results are aggregate bandwidth over 10 clients. 1. Test Setup: We use fio to read/write to a single 5GB file per thread for 300 seconds. A single job (represented in x-axis) is of type {number_of_worker_thread}rw_{block_size}_{op}, where, number_of_worker_threads: 1, 4, 8, 16 Block size: 4K,64K,1M,4M,8M op: rw 2. NFS-Ganesha configuration: Parameters set (other than default): 1. Graceless = True 2. MaxRPCSendBufferSize/MaxRPCRecvBufferSize is set to max value. 3. Observations: - For single thread (on each client) and 4k block size, the b/w is around 45% of cephfs - As number of threads increases, the performance drops. It could be related to nfs-ganesha parameter "Dispatch_Max_Reqs_Xprt", which defaults to 512. Note, this parameter is important only for v2.5. - We did run with both nfs-ganesha mdcache enabled/disabled. But there were no significant improvements with caching. Not sure but it could be related to this issue: https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/223 The results are still preliminary, and I guess with proper tuning of nfs-ganesha parameters, it could be better. Thanks, Supriti ------ Supriti Singh SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) >>> Lars Marowsky-Bree <lmb-IBi9RG/b67k@public.gmane.org> 11/09/17 11:07 AM >>> On 2017-11-08T21:41:41, Sage Weil <sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org> wrote: > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) We use it currently, and it works, but let's not discuss the performance ;-) How else do you want to build this into Mimic? Regards, Lars -- SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) "Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes." -- Oscar Wilde -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html [-- Attachment #1.2: HTML --] [-- Type: text/html, Size: 3384 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: NFS_Ganesha_vs_CephFS.ods --] [-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 25399 bytes --] [-- Attachment #3: Type: text/plain, Size: 178 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list ceph-users-idqoXFIVOFJgJs9I8MT0rw@public.gmane.org http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-09 11:15 ` Supriti Singh @ 2017-11-09 13:21 ` Supriti Singh 2017-11-09 14:28 ` [ceph-users] " Jeff Layton 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Supriti Singh @ 2017-11-09 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: sweil, Lars Marowsky-Bree; +Cc: ceph-users, ceph-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3128 bytes --] The email was not delivered to ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org. So, re-sending it. Few more things regarding the hardware and clients used in our benchmarking setup: - The cephfs benchmark were done using kernel cephfs client. - NFS-Ganesha was mounted using nfs version 4. - Single nfs-ganesha server was used. Ceph and Client setup: - Each client node has 16 cores and 16 GB RAM. - MDS and Ganesha server is running on the same node. - Network interconnect between client and ceph nodes is 40Gbit/s. - Ceph on 8 nodes: (each node has 24 cores/128 GB RAM). - 5 OSD nodes - 3 MON/MDS nodes - 6 OSD daemons per node - Blustore - SSD/NVME journal ------ Supriti Singh SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) >>> Supriti Singh 11/09/17 12:15 PM >>> Hi Sage, As Lars mentioned, at SUSE, we use ganesha 2.5.2/luminous. We did a preliminary performance comparison of cephfs client and nfs-ganesha client. I have attached the results. The results are aggregate bandwidth over 10 clients. 1. Test Setup: We use fio to read/write to a single 5GB file per thread for 300 seconds. A single job (represented in x-axis) is of type {number_of_worker_thread}rw_{block_size}_{op}, where, number_of_worker_threads: 1, 4, 8, 16 Block size: 4K,64K,1M,4M,8M op: rw 2. NFS-Ganesha configuration: Parameters set (other than default): 1. Graceless = True 2. MaxRPCSendBufferSize/MaxRPCRecvBufferSize is set to max value. 3. Observations: - For single thread (on each client) and 4k block size, the b/w is around 45% of cephfs - As number of threads increases, the performance drops. It could be related to nfs-ganesha parameter "Dispatch_Max_Reqs_Xprt", which defaults to 512. Note, this parameter is important only for v2.5. - We did run with both nfs-ganesha mdcache enabled/disabled. But there were no significant improvements with caching. Not sure but it could be related to this issue: https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/223 The results are still preliminary, and I guess with proper tuning of nfs-ganesha parameters, it could be better. Thanks, Supriti ------ Supriti Singh SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) >>> Lars Marowsky-Bree <lmb@suse.com> 11/09/17 11:07 AM >>> On 2017-11-08T21:41:41, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) We use it currently, and it works, but let's not discuss the performance ;-) How else do you want to build this into Mimic? Regards, Lars -- SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) "Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes." -- Oscar Wilde -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html [-- Attachment #2: NFS_Ganesha_vs_CephFS.ods --] [-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 25399 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-09 13:21 ` Supriti Singh @ 2017-11-09 14:28 ` Jeff Layton 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Jeff Layton @ 2017-11-09 14:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Supriti Singh, sweil, Lars Marowsky-Bree; +Cc: ceph-devel, ceph-users Ouch... yeah the rotten performance is sad but not really surprising. We add a lot of extra hops and data copies by going through ganesha. Ganesha also uses the userland client libs and those are organized around the BCCL (Big Ceph Client Lock). I think the only way we'll get decent performance over the long haul is get ganesha out of the data path. A flexfiles pnfs layout is something of a natural fit on top of cephfs, and I imagine that would get us a lot closer to the cephfs read/write numbers. -- Jeff On Thu, 2017-11-09 at 13:21 +0000, Supriti Singh wrote: > The email was not delivered to ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org. So, re-sending it. > > Few more things regarding the hardware and clients used in our benchmarking setup: > - The cephfs benchmark were done using kernel cephfs client. > - NFS-Ganesha was mounted using nfs version 4. > - Single nfs-ganesha server was used. > > Ceph and Client setup: > - Each client node has 16 cores and 16 GB RAM. > - MDS and Ganesha server is running on the same node. > - Network interconnect between client and ceph nodes is 40Gbit/s. > - Ceph on 8 nodes: (each node has 24 cores/128 GB RAM). > - 5 OSD nodes > - 3 MON/MDS nodes > - 6 OSD daemons per node - Blustore - SSD/NVME journal > > > ------ > Supriti Singh SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, > HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) > > > > > > > > Supriti Singh 11/09/17 12:15 PM >>> > > Hi Sage, > > As Lars mentioned, at SUSE, we use ganesha 2.5.2/luminous. We did a preliminary performance comparison of cephfs client > and nfs-ganesha client. I have attached the results. The results are aggregate bandwidth over 10 clients. > > 1. Test Setup: > We use fio to read/write to a single 5GB file per thread for 300 seconds. A single job (represented in x-axis) is of > type {number_of_worker_thread}rw_{block_size}_{op}, where, > number_of_worker_threads: 1, 4, 8, 16 > Block size: 4K,64K,1M,4M,8M > op: rw > > > 2. NFS-Ganesha configuration: > Parameters set (other than default): > 1. Graceless = True > 2. MaxRPCSendBufferSize/MaxRPCRecvBufferSize is set to max value. > > 3. Observations: > - For single thread (on each client) and 4k block size, the b/w is around 45% of cephfs > - As number of threads increases, the performance drops. It could be related to nfs-ganesha parameter > "Dispatch_Max_Reqs_Xprt", which defaults to 512. Note, this parameter is important only for v2.5. > - We did run with both nfs-ganesha mdcache enabled/disabled. But there were no significant improvements with caching. > Not sure but it could be related to this issue: https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/223 > > The results are still preliminary, and I guess with proper tuning of nfs-ganesha parameters, it could be better. > > Thanks, > Supriti > > ------ > Supriti Singh SUSE Linux GmbH, GF: Felix Imendörffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, > HRB 21284 (AG Nürnberg) > > > > > > > > Lars Marowsky-Bree <lmb@suse.com> 11/09/17 11:07 AM >>> > > On 2017-11-08T21:41:41, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: > > > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > > experience been? > > > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > We use it currently, and it works, but let's not discuss the performance > ;-) > > How else do you want to build this into Mimic? > > Regards, > Lars > > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list > ceph-users@lists.ceph.com > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com -- Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? [not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org> ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2017-11-09 10:04 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree @ 2017-11-16 8:17 ` Rafael Lopez 2017-11-16 16:29 ` [ceph-users] " Matt Benjamin 4 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Rafael Lopez @ 2017-11-16 8:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil; +Cc: ceph-devel-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, ceph-users-Qp0mS5GaXlQ [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3526 bytes --] We are running RHCS2.3 (jewel) with ganesha 2.4.2 and cephfs fsal, compiled from srpm. experimenting with CTDB for controlling ganesha HA since we run samba on same servers. Haven't done much functionality/stress testing but on face value basic stuff seems to work well (file operations). In terms of performance, last time I tested ganesha it seemed comparable to ceph-fuse (RHCS2.x/jewel, i think luminous ceph-fuse is better). Though I haven't done rigorous metadata tests or multiple client tests. Also our ganesha servers are quite small, as we are thus far only serving cephfs natively. eg 4G ram 1 core. Here are some FIO results: jobs in order are: 1. async 1M 2. sync 1M 3. async 4k 4. sync 4k 5. seq read 1M 6. rand read 4k Ceph cluster is RHCS 2.3 (10.2.7) CEPH-FUSE (10.2.x) WRITE: io=143652MB, aggrb=490328KB/s, minb=490328KB/s, maxb=490328KB/s, mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec WRITE: io=14341MB, aggrb=48947KB/s, minb=48947KB/s, maxb=48947KB/s, mint=300018msec, maxt=300018msec WRITE: io=9808.2MB, aggrb=33478KB/s, minb=33478KB/s, maxb=33478KB/s, mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec WRITE: io=424476KB, aggrb=1414KB/s, minb=1414KB/s, maxb=1414KB/s, mint=300003msec, maxt=300003ms READ: io=158069MB, aggrb=539527KB/s, minb=539527KB/s, maxb=539527KB/s, mint=300008msec, maxt=300008msec READ: io=1881.2MB, aggrb=6420KB/s, minb=6420KB/s, maxb=6420KB/s, mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec ganesha (nfs3) WRITE: io=157891MB, aggrb=538923KB/s, minb=538923KB/s, maxb=538923KB/s, mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec WRITE: io=38700MB, aggrb=132093KB/s, minb=132093KB/s, maxb=132093KB/s, mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec WRITE: io=3072.0MB, aggrb=10148KB/s, minb=10148KB/s, maxb=10148KB/s, mint=309957msec, maxt=309957msec WRITE: io=397516KB, aggrb=1325KB/s, minb=1325KB/s, maxb=1325KB/s, mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec READ: io=82521MB, aggrb=281669KB/s, minb=281669KB/s, maxb=281669KB/s, mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec READ: io=1322.2MB, aggrb=4513KB/s, minb=4513KB/s, maxb=4513KB/s, mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec cephfs kernel client WRITE: io=471041MB, aggrb=1568.8MB/s, minb=1568.8MB/s, maxb=1568.8MB/s, mint=300394msec, maxt=300394msec WRITE: io=50005MB, aggrb=170680KB/s, minb=170680KB/s, maxb=170680KB/s, mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec WRITE: io=169092MB, aggrb=577166KB/s, minb=577166KB/s, maxb=577166KB/s, mint=300000msec, maxt=300000msec WRITE: io=530548KB, aggrb=1768KB/s, minb=1768KB/s, maxb=1768KB/s, mint=300003msec, maxt=300003msec READ: io=121501MB, aggrb=414720KB/s, minb=414720KB/s, maxb=414720KB/s, mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec READ: io=3264.6MB, aggrb=11142KB/s, minb=11142KB/s, maxb=11142KB/s, mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec happy to share fio job file if anyone wants it. On 9 November 2017 at 08:41, Sage Weil <sweil-H+wXaHxf7aLQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org> wrote: > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > experience been? > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > Thanks! > sage > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > -- *Rafael Lopez* Research Devops Engineer Monash University eResearch Centre T: +61 3 9905 9118 M: +61 (0)427682670 <%2B61%204%2027682%20670> E: rafael.lopez-sFFfwlTeHG43uPMLIKxrzw@public.gmane.org [-- Attachment #1.2: Type: text/html, Size: 5935 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 178 bytes --] _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list ceph-users-idqoXFIVOFJgJs9I8MT0rw@public.gmane.org http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-16 8:17 ` Rafael Lopez @ 2017-11-16 16:29 ` Matt Benjamin 2017-11-17 13:27 ` Jeff Layton 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Matt Benjamin @ 2017-11-16 16:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rafael Lopez; +Cc: Sage Weil, Ceph Development, ceph-users Hi Rafael, Thanks for taking the time to report your results. The similarity to Ceph fuse performance is to be expected, because both Ceph fuse and the nfs-ganesha FSAL driver use libcephfs, as Jeff Layton noted. It's worth noting that nfs-ganesha does not appear to be adding i/o or metadata operation latency. The interesting questions, pushing further on Jeff's point, I think are 1. libcephfs vs kernel cephfs performance delta, and in particular 2. the portion of that delta NOT accounted for by the direct OSD data path available to the kernel mode ceph client--the latter can eventually be made available to nfs-ganesha via pNFS as Jeff hinted, but the former is potentially available for performance improvement The topic of the big client lock is an old one. I experimented with removing it in 2014, branch api-concurrent here git@github.com:linuxbox2/linuxbox-ceph.git. I'm not confident that just removing the client lock bottleneck will bring visible improvements, though, especially until MDS concurrency improvements are in place, but it may be worth revisiting. Matt On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 3:17 AM, Rafael Lopez <rafael.lopez@monash.edu> wrote: > We are running RHCS2.3 (jewel) with ganesha 2.4.2 and cephfs fsal, compiled > from srpm. experimenting with CTDB for controlling ganesha HA since we run > samba on same servers. > > Haven't done much functionality/stress testing but on face value basic stuff > seems to work well (file operations). > > In terms of performance, last time I tested ganesha it seemed comparable to > ceph-fuse (RHCS2.x/jewel, i think luminous ceph-fuse is better). Though I > haven't done rigorous metadata tests or multiple client tests. Also our > ganesha servers are quite small, as we are thus far only serving cephfs > natively. eg 4G ram 1 core. Here are some FIO results: > > jobs in order are: > 1. async 1M > 2. sync 1M > 3. async 4k > 4. sync 4k > 5. seq read 1M > 6. rand read 4k > > Ceph cluster is RHCS 2.3 (10.2.7) > > CEPH-FUSE (10.2.x) > WRITE: io=143652MB, aggrb=490328KB/s, minb=490328KB/s, maxb=490328KB/s, > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > WRITE: io=14341MB, aggrb=48947KB/s, minb=48947KB/s, maxb=48947KB/s, > mint=300018msec, maxt=300018msec > WRITE: io=9808.2MB, aggrb=33478KB/s, minb=33478KB/s, maxb=33478KB/s, > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > WRITE: io=424476KB, aggrb=1414KB/s, minb=1414KB/s, maxb=1414KB/s, > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003ms > READ: io=158069MB, aggrb=539527KB/s, minb=539527KB/s, maxb=539527KB/s, > mint=300008msec, maxt=300008msec > READ: io=1881.2MB, aggrb=6420KB/s, minb=6420KB/s, maxb=6420KB/s, > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > ganesha (nfs3) > WRITE: io=157891MB, aggrb=538923KB/s, minb=538923KB/s, maxb=538923KB/s, > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > WRITE: io=38700MB, aggrb=132093KB/s, minb=132093KB/s, maxb=132093KB/s, > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > WRITE: io=3072.0MB, aggrb=10148KB/s, minb=10148KB/s, maxb=10148KB/s, > mint=309957msec, maxt=309957msec > WRITE: io=397516KB, aggrb=1325KB/s, minb=1325KB/s, maxb=1325KB/s, > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > READ: io=82521MB, aggrb=281669KB/s, minb=281669KB/s, maxb=281669KB/s, > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > READ: io=1322.2MB, aggrb=4513KB/s, minb=4513KB/s, maxb=4513KB/s, > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > cephfs kernel client > WRITE: io=471041MB, aggrb=1568.8MB/s, minb=1568.8MB/s, maxb=1568.8MB/s, > mint=300394msec, maxt=300394msec > WRITE: io=50005MB, aggrb=170680KB/s, minb=170680KB/s, maxb=170680KB/s, > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > WRITE: io=169092MB, aggrb=577166KB/s, minb=577166KB/s, maxb=577166KB/s, > mint=300000msec, maxt=300000msec > WRITE: io=530548KB, aggrb=1768KB/s, minb=1768KB/s, maxb=1768KB/s, > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003msec > READ: io=121501MB, aggrb=414720KB/s, minb=414720KB/s, maxb=414720KB/s, > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > READ: io=3264.6MB, aggrb=11142KB/s, minb=11142KB/s, maxb=11142KB/s, > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > happy to share fio job file if anyone wants it. > > > On 9 November 2017 at 08:41, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your >> experience been? >> >> (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into >> Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) >> >> Thanks! >> sage >> >> -- >> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in >> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > > > > > -- > Rafael Lopez > Research Devops Engineer > Monash University eResearch Centre > > T: +61 3 9905 9118 > M: +61 (0)427682670 > E: rafael.lopez@monash.edu > > > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list > ceph-users@lists.ceph.com > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com > -- Matt Benjamin Red Hat, Inc. 315 West Huron Street, Suite 140A Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103 http://www.redhat.com/en/technologies/storage tel. 734-821-5101 fax. 734-769-8938 cel. 734-216-5309 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-16 16:29 ` [ceph-users] " Matt Benjamin @ 2017-11-17 13:27 ` Jeff Layton 2017-11-17 14:09 ` Wyllys Ingersoll 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Jeff Layton @ 2017-11-17 13:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Matt Benjamin, Rafael Lopez; +Cc: Sage Weil, Ceph Development, ceph-users FWIW, it might be interesting at some point to hack together a libcephfs backend driver for fio. It already has one for librbd so I imagine it wouldn't be too hard to do, and would probably give us a better raw comparison between the kernel client and libcephfs. On Thu, 2017-11-16 at 11:29 -0500, Matt Benjamin wrote: > Hi Rafael, > > Thanks for taking the time to report your results. > > The similarity to Ceph fuse performance is to be expected, because > both Ceph fuse and the nfs-ganesha FSAL driver use libcephfs, as Jeff > Layton noted. It's worth noting that nfs-ganesha does not appear to > be adding i/o or metadata operation latency. > > The interesting questions, pushing further on Jeff's point, I think are > > 1. libcephfs vs kernel cephfs performance delta, and in particular > 2. the portion of that delta NOT accounted for by the direct OSD data > path available to the kernel mode ceph client--the latter can > eventually be made available to nfs-ganesha via pNFS as Jeff hinted, > but the former is potentially available for performance improvement > > The topic of the big client lock is an old one. I experimented with > removing it in 2014, branch api-concurrent here > git@github.com:linuxbox2/linuxbox-ceph.git. I'm not confident that > just removing the client lock bottleneck will bring visible > improvements, though, especially until MDS concurrency improvements > are in place, but it may be worth revisiting. > > Matt > > On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 3:17 AM, Rafael Lopez <rafael.lopez@monash.edu> wrote: > > We are running RHCS2.3 (jewel) with ganesha 2.4.2 and cephfs fsal, compiled > > from srpm. experimenting with CTDB for controlling ganesha HA since we run > > samba on same servers. > > > > Haven't done much functionality/stress testing but on face value basic stuff > > seems to work well (file operations). > > > > In terms of performance, last time I tested ganesha it seemed comparable to > > ceph-fuse (RHCS2.x/jewel, i think luminous ceph-fuse is better). Though I > > haven't done rigorous metadata tests or multiple client tests. Also our > > ganesha servers are quite small, as we are thus far only serving cephfs > > natively. eg 4G ram 1 core. Here are some FIO results: > > > > jobs in order are: > > 1. async 1M > > 2. sync 1M > > 3. async 4k > > 4. sync 4k > > 5. seq read 1M > > 6. rand read 4k > > > > Ceph cluster is RHCS 2.3 (10.2.7) > > > > CEPH-FUSE (10.2.x) > > WRITE: io=143652MB, aggrb=490328KB/s, minb=490328KB/s, maxb=490328KB/s, > > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > > WRITE: io=14341MB, aggrb=48947KB/s, minb=48947KB/s, maxb=48947KB/s, > > mint=300018msec, maxt=300018msec > > WRITE: io=9808.2MB, aggrb=33478KB/s, minb=33478KB/s, maxb=33478KB/s, > > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > WRITE: io=424476KB, aggrb=1414KB/s, minb=1414KB/s, maxb=1414KB/s, > > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003ms > > READ: io=158069MB, aggrb=539527KB/s, minb=539527KB/s, maxb=539527KB/s, > > mint=300008msec, maxt=300008msec > > READ: io=1881.2MB, aggrb=6420KB/s, minb=6420KB/s, maxb=6420KB/s, > > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > > > ganesha (nfs3) > > WRITE: io=157891MB, aggrb=538923KB/s, minb=538923KB/s, maxb=538923KB/s, > > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > > WRITE: io=38700MB, aggrb=132093KB/s, minb=132093KB/s, maxb=132093KB/s, > > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > > WRITE: io=3072.0MB, aggrb=10148KB/s, minb=10148KB/s, maxb=10148KB/s, > > mint=309957msec, maxt=309957msec > > WRITE: io=397516KB, aggrb=1325KB/s, minb=1325KB/s, maxb=1325KB/s, > > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > READ: io=82521MB, aggrb=281669KB/s, minb=281669KB/s, maxb=281669KB/s, > > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > > READ: io=1322.2MB, aggrb=4513KB/s, minb=4513KB/s, maxb=4513KB/s, > > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > > > cephfs kernel client > > WRITE: io=471041MB, aggrb=1568.8MB/s, minb=1568.8MB/s, maxb=1568.8MB/s, > > mint=300394msec, maxt=300394msec > > WRITE: io=50005MB, aggrb=170680KB/s, minb=170680KB/s, maxb=170680KB/s, > > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec > > WRITE: io=169092MB, aggrb=577166KB/s, minb=577166KB/s, maxb=577166KB/s, > > mint=300000msec, maxt=300000msec > > WRITE: io=530548KB, aggrb=1768KB/s, minb=1768KB/s, maxb=1768KB/s, > > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003msec > > READ: io=121501MB, aggrb=414720KB/s, minb=414720KB/s, maxb=414720KB/s, > > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec > > READ: io=3264.6MB, aggrb=11142KB/s, minb=11142KB/s, maxb=11142KB/s, > > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec > > > > happy to share fio job file if anyone wants it. > > > > > > On 9 November 2017 at 08:41, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > > > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your > > > experience been? > > > > > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into > > > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) > > > > > > Thanks! > > > sage > > > > > > -- > > > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > > > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > > > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Rafael Lopez > > Research Devops Engineer > > Monash University eResearch Centre > > > > T: +61 3 9905 9118 > > M: +61 (0)427682670 > > E: rafael.lopez@monash.edu > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > ceph-users mailing list > > ceph-users@lists.ceph.com > > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com > > > > > -- Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [ceph-users] who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? 2017-11-17 13:27 ` Jeff Layton @ 2017-11-17 14:09 ` Wyllys Ingersoll 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Wyllys Ingersoll @ 2017-11-17 14:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Layton Cc: Matt Benjamin, Rafael Lopez, Sage Weil, Ceph Development, ceph-users +100 to this idea. On Fri, Nov 17, 2017 at 8:27 AM, Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org> wrote: > FWIW, it might be interesting at some point to hack together a libcephfs > backend driver for fio. It already has one for librbd so I imagine it > wouldn't be too hard to do, and would probably give us a better raw > comparison between the kernel client and libcephfs. > > On Thu, 2017-11-16 at 11:29 -0500, Matt Benjamin wrote: >> Hi Rafael, >> >> Thanks for taking the time to report your results. >> >> The similarity to Ceph fuse performance is to be expected, because >> both Ceph fuse and the nfs-ganesha FSAL driver use libcephfs, as Jeff >> Layton noted. It's worth noting that nfs-ganesha does not appear to >> be adding i/o or metadata operation latency. >> >> The interesting questions, pushing further on Jeff's point, I think are >> >> 1. libcephfs vs kernel cephfs performance delta, and in particular >> 2. the portion of that delta NOT accounted for by the direct OSD data >> path available to the kernel mode ceph client--the latter can >> eventually be made available to nfs-ganesha via pNFS as Jeff hinted, >> but the former is potentially available for performance improvement >> >> The topic of the big client lock is an old one. I experimented with >> removing it in 2014, branch api-concurrent here >> git@github.com:linuxbox2/linuxbox-ceph.git. I'm not confident that >> just removing the client lock bottleneck will bring visible >> improvements, though, especially until MDS concurrency improvements >> are in place, but it may be worth revisiting. >> >> Matt >> >> On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 3:17 AM, Rafael Lopez <rafael.lopez@monash.edu> wrote: >> > We are running RHCS2.3 (jewel) with ganesha 2.4.2 and cephfs fsal, compiled >> > from srpm. experimenting with CTDB for controlling ganesha HA since we run >> > samba on same servers. >> > >> > Haven't done much functionality/stress testing but on face value basic stuff >> > seems to work well (file operations). >> > >> > In terms of performance, last time I tested ganesha it seemed comparable to >> > ceph-fuse (RHCS2.x/jewel, i think luminous ceph-fuse is better). Though I >> > haven't done rigorous metadata tests or multiple client tests. Also our >> > ganesha servers are quite small, as we are thus far only serving cephfs >> > natively. eg 4G ram 1 core. Here are some FIO results: >> > >> > jobs in order are: >> > 1. async 1M >> > 2. sync 1M >> > 3. async 4k >> > 4. sync 4k >> > 5. seq read 1M >> > 6. rand read 4k >> > >> > Ceph cluster is RHCS 2.3 (10.2.7) >> > >> > CEPH-FUSE (10.2.x) >> > WRITE: io=143652MB, aggrb=490328KB/s, minb=490328KB/s, maxb=490328KB/s, >> > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec >> > WRITE: io=14341MB, aggrb=48947KB/s, minb=48947KB/s, maxb=48947KB/s, >> > mint=300018msec, maxt=300018msec >> > WRITE: io=9808.2MB, aggrb=33478KB/s, minb=33478KB/s, maxb=33478KB/s, >> > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec >> > WRITE: io=424476KB, aggrb=1414KB/s, minb=1414KB/s, maxb=1414KB/s, >> > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003ms >> > READ: io=158069MB, aggrb=539527KB/s, minb=539527KB/s, maxb=539527KB/s, >> > mint=300008msec, maxt=300008msec >> > READ: io=1881.2MB, aggrb=6420KB/s, minb=6420KB/s, maxb=6420KB/s, >> > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec >> > >> > ganesha (nfs3) >> > WRITE: io=157891MB, aggrb=538923KB/s, minb=538923KB/s, maxb=538923KB/s, >> > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec >> > WRITE: io=38700MB, aggrb=132093KB/s, minb=132093KB/s, maxb=132093KB/s, >> > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec >> > WRITE: io=3072.0MB, aggrb=10148KB/s, minb=10148KB/s, maxb=10148KB/s, >> > mint=309957msec, maxt=309957msec >> > WRITE: io=397516KB, aggrb=1325KB/s, minb=1325KB/s, maxb=1325KB/s, >> > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec >> > READ: io=82521MB, aggrb=281669KB/s, minb=281669KB/s, maxb=281669KB/s, >> > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec >> > READ: io=1322.2MB, aggrb=4513KB/s, minb=4513KB/s, maxb=4513KB/s, >> > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec >> > >> > cephfs kernel client >> > WRITE: io=471041MB, aggrb=1568.8MB/s, minb=1568.8MB/s, maxb=1568.8MB/s, >> > mint=300394msec, maxt=300394msec >> > WRITE: io=50005MB, aggrb=170680KB/s, minb=170680KB/s, maxb=170680KB/s, >> > mint=300006msec, maxt=300006msec >> > WRITE: io=169092MB, aggrb=577166KB/s, minb=577166KB/s, maxb=577166KB/s, >> > mint=300000msec, maxt=300000msec >> > WRITE: io=530548KB, aggrb=1768KB/s, minb=1768KB/s, maxb=1768KB/s, >> > mint=300003msec, maxt=300003msec >> > READ: io=121501MB, aggrb=414720KB/s, minb=414720KB/s, maxb=414720KB/s, >> > mint=300002msec, maxt=300002msec >> > READ: io=3264.6MB, aggrb=11142KB/s, minb=11142KB/s, maxb=11142KB/s, >> > mint=300001msec, maxt=300001msec >> > >> > happy to share fio job file if anyone wants it. >> > >> > >> > On 9 November 2017 at 08:41, Sage Weil <sweil@redhat.com> wrote: >> > > >> > > Who is running nfs-ganesha's FSAL to export CephFS? What has your >> > > experience been? >> > > >> > > (We are working on building proper testing and support for this into >> > > Mimic, but the ganesha FSAL has been around for years.) >> > > >> > > Thanks! >> > > sage >> > > >> > > -- >> > > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in >> > > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >> > > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > -- >> > Rafael Lopez >> > Research Devops Engineer >> > Monash University eResearch Centre >> > >> > T: +61 3 9905 9118 >> > M: +61 (0)427682670 >> > E: rafael.lopez@monash.edu >> > >> > >> > _______________________________________________ >> > ceph-users mailing list >> > ceph-users@lists.ceph.com >> > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com >> > >> >> >> > > -- > Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org> > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2017-11-17 14:09 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
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2017-11-08 21:41 who is using nfs-ganesha and cephfs? Sage Weil
2017-11-08 21:52 ` Wyllys Ingersoll
2017-11-08 21:53 ` [ceph-users] " Marc Roos
[not found] ` <alpine.DEB.2.11.1711082140180.29217-qHenpvqtifaMSRpgCs4c+g@public.gmane.org>
2017-11-08 21:53 ` Marc Roos
2017-11-08 22:42 ` Lincoln Bryant
2017-11-09 7:10 ` Wido den Hollander
2017-11-09 10:04 ` Lars Marowsky-Bree
[not found] ` <20171109100440.yut3qjvejxwd7oz3-IBi9RG/b67k@public.gmane.org>
2017-11-09 11:15 ` Supriti Singh
2017-11-09 13:21 ` Supriti Singh
2017-11-09 14:28 ` [ceph-users] " Jeff Layton
2017-11-16 8:17 ` Rafael Lopez
2017-11-16 16:29 ` [ceph-users] " Matt Benjamin
2017-11-17 13:27 ` Jeff Layton
2017-11-17 14:09 ` Wyllys Ingersoll
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