* optmize librbd for iops
@ 2012-11-12 13:50 Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
2012-11-13 7:51 ` Josh Durgin
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG @ 2012-11-12 13:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org
Hello list,
are there any plans to optimize librbd for iops? Right now i'm able to
get 50.000 iop/s via iscsi and 100.000 iop/s using multipathing with iscsi.
With librbd i'm stuck to around 18.000iops. As this scales with more
hosts but not with more disks in a vm. It must be limited by rbd
implementation in kvm / librbd.
Greets,
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: optmize librbd for iops
2012-11-12 13:50 optmize librbd for iops Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
@ 2012-11-13 7:51 ` Josh Durgin
2012-11-13 7:55 ` Stefan Priebe
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Josh Durgin @ 2012-11-13 7:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG; +Cc: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org
On 11/12/2012 05:50 AM, Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> are there any plans to optimize librbd for iops? Right now i'm able to
> get 50.000 iop/s via iscsi and 100.000 iop/s using multipathing with iscsi.
>
> With librbd i'm stuck to around 18.000iops. As this scales with more
> hosts but not with more disks in a vm. It must be limited by rbd
> implementation in kvm / librbd.
It'd be interesting to see which layers are most limiting in this
case - qemu/kvm, librados, or librbd.
How does rados bench with 4k writes and then 4k reads with many
concurrent IOs do?
Unfortunately there's no librbd read benchmark yet.
Josh
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: optmize librbd for iops
2012-11-13 7:51 ` Josh Durgin
@ 2012-11-13 7:55 ` Stefan Priebe
2012-11-13 8:20 ` Josh Durgin
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Priebe @ 2012-11-13 7:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Josh Durgin; +Cc: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org
Am 13.11.2012 08:51, schrieb Josh Durgin:
> On 11/12/2012 05:50 AM, Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG wrote:
>> Hello list,
>>
>> are there any plans to optimize librbd for iops? Right now i'm able to
>> get 50.000 iop/s via iscsi and 100.000 iop/s using multipathing with
>> iscsi.
>>
>> With librbd i'm stuck to around 18.000iops. As this scales with more
>> hosts but not with more disks in a vm. It must be limited by rbd
>> implementation in kvm / librbd.
>
> It'd be interesting to see which layers are most limiting in this
> case - qemu/kvm, librados, or librbd.
>
> How does rados bench with 4k writes and then 4k reads with many
> concurrent IOs do?
Right now i'm using qemu-kvm with librbd and fio inside guest. How does
the rados bench work?
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: optmize librbd for iops
2012-11-13 7:55 ` Stefan Priebe
@ 2012-11-13 8:20 ` Josh Durgin
2012-11-13 10:10 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Josh Durgin @ 2012-11-13 8:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stefan Priebe; +Cc: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org
On 11/12/2012 11:55 PM, Stefan Priebe wrote:
> Am 13.11.2012 08:51, schrieb Josh Durgin:
>> On 11/12/2012 05:50 AM, Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG wrote:
>>> Hello list,
>>>
>>> are there any plans to optimize librbd for iops? Right now i'm able to
>>> get 50.000 iop/s via iscsi and 100.000 iop/s using multipathing with
>>> iscsi.
>>>
>>> With librbd i'm stuck to around 18.000iops. As this scales with more
>>> hosts but not with more disks in a vm. It must be limited by rbd
>>> implementation in kvm / librbd.
>>
>> It'd be interesting to see which layers are most limiting in this
>> case - qemu/kvm, librados, or librbd.
>>
>> How does rados bench with 4k writes and then 4k reads with many
>> concurrent IOs do?
> Right now i'm using qemu-kvm with librbd and fio inside guest. How does
> the rados bench work?
rados bench uses librados aio, keeping several operations in flight.
IO size is the same as object size for it.
You can do a 4k write benchmark that doesn't delete the objects it
writes, with 32 IOs in flight for 300 seconds:
rados -p data bench 300 write -b 4096 -t 32 --no-cleanup
Then a read benchmark (only sequential is implemented, but with 4k
objects it's similar to random if you flush the osd's page cache before
running it):
rados -p data bench 300 seq -b 4096 -t 32
You can divide the avg throughput by IO size to get IOPS.
Josh
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2012-11-13 10:10 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2012-11-12 13:50 optmize librbd for iops Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
2012-11-13 7:51 ` Josh Durgin
2012-11-13 7:55 ` Stefan Priebe
2012-11-13 8:20 ` Josh Durgin
2012-11-13 10:10 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
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