* [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11
@ 2006-06-28 9:24 Cristian Livadaru
2006-06-29 14:46 ` Cristian Livadaru
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-28 9:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-lvm
I have built yesterday a 2.6.11 kernel with Xen.
I wanted to move some old data to my LVM and the speed according to
midnight commander was about 350kb/s ! about 2gig where copied in 4
hours! I then rebooted with the original Debian Kernel 2.4.27-2-386 and
the speed incresead to about 5mb/s that doesn't make me very happy
either but was way better then 350kb!
I have been searching the net all night and didn't come up with a
solution. I have no clue what is wrong here.
What did I do wrong and how can I increase the performance?
The lvm is made out of 2x Seagate 300GB IDE HD not striped.
esplendidos:~# lvm lvdisplay
--- Logical volume ---
LV Name /dev/share/sharevg
VG Name share
LV UUID KdvcJ9-ZLMP-AJYA-soGK-qHfy-UtrX-PpV9Kv
LV Write Access read/write
LV Status available
# open 1
LV Size 558.91 GB
Current LE 143082
Segments 2
Allocation inherit
Read ahead sectors 0
Block device 254:0
esplendidos:~# lvm dumpconfig
devices {
dir="/dev"
scan="/dev"
filter="r|/dev/cdrom|"
cache="/etc/lvm/.cache"
write_cache_state=1
sysfs_scan=1
md_component_detection=0
}
activation {
missing_stripe_filler="/dev/ioerror"
mirror_region_size=512
reserved_stack=256
reserved_memory=8192
process_priority=-18
}
global {
umask=63
test=0
activation=1
proc="/proc"
locking_type=1
locking_dir="/var/lock/lvm"
}
shell {
history_size=100
}
backup {
backup=1
backup_dir="/etc/lvm/backup"
archive=1
archive_dir="/etc/lvm/archive"
retain_min=10
retain_days=30
}
log {
verbose=0
syslog=1
overwrite=0
level=0
indent=1
command_names=0
prefix=" "
}
any tip for performance tuning?
--
Cristian Livadaru
http://vwclub.ro/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread* Re: [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 2006-06-28 9:24 [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-29 14:46 ` Cristian Livadaru 2006-06-29 16:15 ` Dieter Stüken 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-29 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm me again ... isn't there anybody that could give ANY hint on what's wrong? I did some test with dd and the result is terrible! LVM explendidos:/shared# dd if=/dev/zero of=test1.dd bs=64 count=1000 1000+0 records in 1000+0 records out 64000 bytes transferred in 20.019969 seconds (3197 bytes/sec) NOT LVM dd if=/dev/zero of=test1.dd bs=64 count=1000 1000+0 records in 1000+0 records out 64000 bytes transferred in 0.004496 seconds (14234595 bytes/sec) I am searching and searching but can't find anywhere any answer :( On Wed, Jun 28, 2006 at 11:24:27AM +0200, Cristian Livadaru wrote: > I have built yesterday a 2.6.11 kernel with Xen. > I wanted to move some old data to my LVM and the speed according to > midnight commander was about 350kb/s ! about 2gig where copied in 4 > hours! I then rebooted with the original Debian Kernel 2.4.27-2-386 and > the speed incresead to about 5mb/s that doesn't make me very happy > either but was way better then 350kb! > I have been searching the net all night and didn't come up with a > solution. I have no clue what is wrong here. > What did I do wrong and how can I increase the performance? > > The lvm is made out of 2x Seagate 300GB IDE HD not striped. > > esplendidos:~# lvm lvdisplay > --- Logical volume --- > LV Name /dev/share/sharevg > VG Name share > LV UUID KdvcJ9-ZLMP-AJYA-soGK-qHfy-UtrX-PpV9Kv > LV Write Access read/write > LV Status available > # open 1 > LV Size 558.91 GB > Current LE 143082 > Segments 2 > Allocation inherit > Read ahead sectors 0 > Block device 254:0 > > esplendidos:~# lvm dumpconfig > devices { > dir="/dev" > scan="/dev" > filter="r|/dev/cdrom|" > cache="/etc/lvm/.cache" > write_cache_state=1 > sysfs_scan=1 > md_component_detection=0 > } > activation { > missing_stripe_filler="/dev/ioerror" > mirror_region_size=512 > reserved_stack=256 > reserved_memory=8192 > process_priority=-18 > } > global { > umask=63 > test=0 > activation=1 > proc="/proc" > locking_type=1 > locking_dir="/var/lock/lvm" > } > shell { > history_size=100 > } > backup { > backup=1 > backup_dir="/etc/lvm/backup" > archive=1 > archive_dir="/etc/lvm/archive" > retain_min=10 > retain_days=30 > } > log { > verbose=0 > syslog=1 > overwrite=0 > level=0 > indent=1 > command_names=0 > prefix=" " > } > > any tip for performance tuning? > > -- > Cristian Livadaru > http://vwclub.ro/ > > _______________________________________________ > linux-lvm mailing list > linux-lvm@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm > read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 2006-06-29 14:46 ` Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-29 16:15 ` Dieter Stüken 2006-06-30 7:32 ` Cristian Livadaru 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Dieter Stüken @ 2006-06-29 16:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: LVM general discussion and development Cristian Livadaru wrote: > me again ... isn't there anybody that could give ANY hint on what's > wrong? > > I did some test with dd and the result is terrible! > > LVM > explendidos:/shared# dd if=/dev/zero of=test1.dd bs=64 count=1000 > 1000+0 records in > 1000+0 records out > 64000 bytes transferred in 20.019969 seconds (3197 bytes/sec) seems the data gets written synchronously without any buffering. Thus each write is delayed until the data is really written to disk. For a 5400 RPM disk you get 90 transactions per seconds. This gives about 10 seconds for 1000 chunks. "bs=64" means 64 bytes! so each sector will be written multiple times. So may be the system even reads in each sector again each time before writing it, thus it takes two turns which gives 20 seconds. Unfortunately I can't tell why this happens :-( May be "direct IO" takes place (like for oflags=direct), or this is some configuration option of LVM, i don't know about. Try using "hdparm" to see, if DMA etc. is enabled. Have a look into /var/log/messages or use "dmesg" for nay hardware problems. I recently discovered the "blockdev" command. Do you use any special ext3 feature? You may try "tune2fs -o journal_data_writeback". If you don't have relevant data on the LV, you may try to write to the LV device directly. Is it slow for read, too? try "hdparm -t" Dieter. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 2006-06-29 16:15 ` Dieter Stüken @ 2006-06-30 7:32 ` Cristian Livadaru 2006-06-30 12:32 ` Cristian Livadaru 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-30 7:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm On Thu, Jun 29, 2006 at 06:15:23PM +0200, Dieter St?ken wrote: > Cristian Livadaru wrote: > > me again ... isn't there anybody that could give ANY hint on what's > > wrong? > > > > I did some test with dd and the result is terrible! > > > > LVM > > explendidos:/shared# dd if=/dev/zero of=test1.dd bs=64 count=1000 > > 1000+0 records in > > 1000+0 records out > > 64000 bytes transferred in 20.019969 seconds (3197 bytes/sec) > > seems the data gets written synchronously without any buffering. > Thus each write is delayed until the data is really written to > disk. For a 5400 RPM disk you get 90 transactions per seconds. > This gives about 10 seconds for 1000 chunks. "bs=64" means > 64 bytes! so each sector will be written multiple times. > So may be the system even reads in each sector again each time > before writing it, thus it takes two turns which gives 20 seconds. > > Unfortunately I can't tell why this happens :-( > > May be "direct IO" takes place (like for oflags=direct), where could I check this? > or this is some configuration option of LVM, i don't know about. > Try using "hdparm" to see, if DMA etc. is enabled. Have a look no matter how it's set, the result is always the same. I could'nt find any usefull information in any logfiles, I enabled LVM verbose mode and debug output but still nothing was found. > into /var/log/messages or use "dmesg" for nay hardware problems. > I recently discovered the "blockdev" command. Do you use any special I have read in some posts on the mailinglist about blockdev but not quite sure on how I could use it to solve my problem. > ext3 feature? You may try "tune2fs -o journal_data_writeback". > If you don't have relevant data on the LV, you may try to write > to the LV device directly. Is it slow for read, too? try "hdparm -t" hdparm -t /dev/share/sharevg /dev/share/sharevg: Timing buffered disk reads: 146 MB in 3.01 seconds = 48.50 MB/sec HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) (wait for flush complete) failed: Inappropriate ioctl for device I tried tune2fs but it didn't get any better. I also dont understand why with kernel 2.4 I get about 5mb/s instead of the 350kb/s not that 5mb would be great but still, much better then 350kb/s Maybee I should mention that this is some "want-to-be" raid controler that was on the mainboard. 0000:00:0e.0 RAID bus controller: Triones Technologies, Inc. HPT374 (rev 07) Cris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 2006-06-30 7:32 ` Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-30 12:32 ` Cristian Livadaru 0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread From: Cristian Livadaru @ 2006-06-30 12:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-lvm On Fri, Jun 30, 2006 at 09:32:13AM +0200, Cristian Livadaru wrote: > On Thu, Jun 29, 2006 at 06:15:23PM +0200, Dieter St?ken wrote: > > Cristian Livadaru wrote: > > > me again ... isn't there anybody that could give ANY hint on what's > > > wrong? > > > > > > I did some test with dd and the result is terrible! > > > > > > LVM > > > explendidos:/shared# dd if=/dev/zero of=test1.dd bs=64 count=1000 > > > 1000+0 records in > > > 1000+0 records out > > > 64000 bytes transferred in 20.019969 seconds (3197 bytes/sec) > > > > seems the data gets written synchronously without any buffering. > > Thus each write is delayed until the data is really written to > > disk. For a 5400 RPM disk you get 90 transactions per seconds. > > This gives about 10 seconds for 1000 chunks. "bs=64" means > > 64 bytes! so each sector will be written multiple times. > > So may be the system even reads in each sector again each time > > before writing it, thus it takes two turns which gives 20 seconds. > > > > Unfortunately I can't tell why this happens :-( > > > > May be "direct IO" takes place (like for oflags=direct), > > where could I check this? > > > or this is some configuration option of LVM, i don't know about. > > Try using "hdparm" to see, if DMA etc. is enabled. Have a look > > no matter how it's set, the result is always the same. > I could'nt find any usefull information in any logfiles, I enabled LVM > verbose mode and debug output but still nothing was found. > > > into /var/log/messages or use "dmesg" for nay hardware problems. > > I recently discovered the "blockdev" command. Do you use any special > I have read in some posts on the mailinglist about blockdev but not > quite sure on how I could use it to solve my problem. > > > ext3 feature? You may try "tune2fs -o journal_data_writeback". > > If you don't have relevant data on the LV, you may try to write > > to the LV device directly. Is it slow for read, too? try "hdparm -t" > > hdparm -t /dev/share/sharevg > > /dev/share/sharevg: > Timing buffered disk reads: 146 MB in 3.01 seconds = 48.50 MB/sec > HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) (wait for flush complete) failed: Inappropriate > ioctl for device > > I tried tune2fs but it didn't get any better. > I also dont understand why with kernel 2.4 I get about 5mb/s instead of > the 350kb/s > not that 5mb would be great but still, much better then 350kb/s > > Maybee I should mention that this is some "want-to-be" raid controler > that was on the mainboard. > > 0000:00:0e.0 RAID bus controller: Triones Technologies, Inc. HPT374 (rev > 07) > very strange, I just created a lvm on to other disks the size of this lvm is only 1gb and I did the dd test in there and it was way better. here the config of my slow LVM, 2x 300GB cat /etc/lvm/backup/share # Generated by LVM2: Fri Jun 9 18:26:30 2006 contents = "Text Format Volume Group" version = 1 description = "Created *after* executing '/sbin/vgcfgbackup'" creation_host = "esplendidos" # Linux esplendidos 2.4.27-2-386 #1 Thu Jan 20 10:55:08 JST 2005 i686 creation_time = 1149877590 # Fri Jun 9 18:26:30 2006 share { id = "6szXKe-QPvJ-t14I-kF13-0JSc-bevq-dv4KBL" seqno = 2 status = ["RESIZEABLE", "READ", "WRITE"] extent_size = 8192 # 4 Megabytes max_lv = 0 max_pv = 0 physical_volumes { pv0 { id = "g3jfAR-Z2Ka-SCgr-08QB-8WBn-5g4h-jXLrn1" device = "/dev/hde1" # Hint only status = ["ALLOCATABLE"] pe_start = 384 pe_count = 71541 # 279.457 Gigabytes } pv1 { id = "kYQB4j-fYV9-3NUa-g0Sg-H4Bk-Kx5F-wRO9G1" device = "/dev/hdg1" # Hint only status = ["ALLOCATABLE"] pe_start = 384 pe_count = 71541 # 279.457 Gigabytes } } logical_volumes { sharevg { id = "KdvcJ9-ZLMP-AJYA-soGK-qHfy-UtrX-PpV9Kv" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 2 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 71541 # 279.457 Gigabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv0", 0 ] } segment2 { start_extent = 71541 extent_count = 71541 # 279.457 Gigabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv1", 0 ] } } } } and here the config of the new lvm on the other disks: cat /etc/lvm/backup/vhostvg # Generated by LVM2: Fri Jun 30 11:15:54 2006 contents = "Text Format Volume Group" version = 1 description = "Created *after* executing 'lvcreate -L200M -nvm02swaplv vhostvg'" creation_host = "esplendidos" # Linux esplendidos 2.6.11.12-xen0 #3 Thu Jun 29 15:47:52 CEST 2006 i686 creation_time = 1151658954 # Fri Jun 30 11:15:54 2006 vhostvg { id = "bZljKZ-0k6u-kuo5-4tGM-MxF2-oft4-R2R9mf" seqno = 5 status = ["RESIZEABLE", "READ", "WRITE"] extent_size = 8192 # 4 Megabytes max_lv = 0 max_pv = 0 physical_volumes { pv0 { id = "6POjat-zX5c-q7g5-KeRm-2ZmG-CAv4-odYFrt" device = "/dev/hdi1" # Hint only status = ["ALLOCATABLE"] pe_start = 384 pe_count = 29311 # 114.496 Gigabytes } pv1 { id = "VaOcDQ-wyN5-5ahB-UF3y-zcTw-7e1U-PnJUnJ" device = "/dev/hdk1" # Hint only status = ["ALLOCATABLE"] pe_start = 384 pe_count = 29311 # 114.496 Gigabytes } } logical_volumes { vm01lv { id = "nfdL2Z-NzUL-K9Ci-EF4L-izCq-qbnl-ZI6foI" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 1 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 256 # 1024 Megabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv0", 0 ] } } vm01swaplv { id = "byPo9V-48mm-lfts-HZ4a-D21I-Y7Qt-573te9" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 1 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 125 # 500 Megabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv0", 256 ] } } vm02lv { id = "up70a7-RETo-RvPI-liCc-ptdc-1qjA-MXrnsG" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 1 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 125 # 500 Megabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv0", 381 ] } } vm02swaplv { id = "RrkcHD-SjMW-q4iz-3gGB-kgqV-TPDj-k7Jrl5" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 1 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 50 # 200 Megabytes type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 # linear stripes = [ "pv0", 506 ] } } } } the 2 other disks are also on the HPT IDE Raid controller ( which is actualy not running as raid, I just use it for additional IDE ports ) Cris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-06-30 12:32 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-06-28 9:24 [linux-lvm] LVM incredible slow with Kernel 2.6.11 Cristian Livadaru 2006-06-29 14:46 ` Cristian Livadaru 2006-06-29 16:15 ` Dieter Stüken 2006-06-30 7:32 ` Cristian Livadaru 2006-06-30 12:32 ` Cristian Livadaru
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