* raid 1 vs raid 0+1 @ 2002-10-29 12:29 Antonello Piemonte 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard 0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread From: Antonello Piemonte @ 2002-10-29 12:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-raid Hello I have a server wich I would like to set up with mirroring for some data protections (against disk failure). the machine is supposed to deal mostly with writing of lots of small files (2kb perhaps 4kb each) to disk (well, array) and the goal would be to be able to write at least few hundreds files per seconds (!). the question is: for performance, is it better a raid 1 or a raid 0+1 configuration? is the above load (number of files written per second) a realistic goal to attain with a SCSI based uniprocessor PIII 800MHZ with ext3 file system (this I will tackle separately, perhaps will use ext2 to increase performance) and 1 Gig of RAM? thanks in advance for any opinion/comment! regards antonello ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 12:29 raid 1 vs raid 0+1 Antonello Piemonte @ 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Jakob Oestergaard @ 2002-10-29 13:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Antonello Piemonte; +Cc: linux-raid On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 01:29:23PM +0100, Antonello Piemonte wrote: > Hello > > I have a server wich I would like to set up with > mirroring for some data protections (against disk failure). > the machine is supposed to deal mostly with writing of > lots of small files (2kb perhaps 4kb each) to disk (well, array) > and the goal would be to be able to write at least few hundreds > files per seconds (!). > > the question is: for performance, is it better a raid 1 or a > raid 0+1 configuration? is the above load (number of files written > per second) a realistic goal to attain with a SCSI based uniprocessor PIII > 800MHZ with ext3 file system (this I will tackle separately, perhaps > will use ext2 to increase performance) and 1 Gig of RAM? On a dual PIII-550 with 512 MB of memory, ext3, and a RAID-0+1 (four 40G 7200rpm IBM IDE Deathstar disks, 64k chunk-size on the RAID-0), I get: $ time for i in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do mkdir $i; for j in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do dd if=/dev/zero of=$j/$i bs=1k count=4; done done real 0m5.024s So, 5 seconds for writing one thousand 4 kb files *sequentially*. Note that I only put 100 files in each directory - if I put 1000 files in one directory, performance would degrade (more significantly when the number is, say, 10000). You may want to experiment with ext3 journalling options - you may see better performance on data=journal mode, if you write the files in bursts (with some longer pauses in between). I cannot give you any certain advice here, other than to experiment. RAID-0 will probably allow you to scale better, but I'm really not sure how the performance on this rather perculiar workload changes as you add disks - in any case it will be *highly* filesystem dependent. You should definitely also try out ReiserFS and eventually JFS, XFS, and perhaps even one of the FAT variants (yes, FAT is actually *very* fast for some very particular workloads, because it is so primitive (eg. it gets less in the way) - at least this used to be true, but I do not know if it is still so, and I'm not sure about your workload either). So in short; Everything I said here except for the 5 second benchmark is guessing... Now you go measure ;) Please, if you do decide to measure, do post a summary here to the list. I'm sure people will find it interesting, and it will appear in the archives for the next person with the same problem to find. Cheers, -- ................................................................ : jakob@unthought.net : And I see the elder races, : :.........................: putrid forms of man : : Jakob Østergaard : See him rise and claim the earth, : : OZ9ABN : his downfall is at hand. : :.........................:............{Konkhra}...............: - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" 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] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard @ 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 15:39 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 15:27 ` Antonello Piemonte 2002-10-29 16:19 ` Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk 2 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread From: Stephen Lee @ 2002-10-29 15:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Raid On Tue, 2002-10-29 at 05:14, Jakob Oestergaard wrote: > On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 01:29:23PM +0100, Antonello Piemonte wrote: > > the question is: for performance, is it better a raid 1 or a > > raid 0+1 configuration? is the above load (number of files written > > per second) a realistic goal to attain with a SCSI based uniprocessor PIII > > 800MHZ with ext3 file system (this I will tackle separately, perhaps > > will use ext2 to increase performance) and 1 Gig of RAM? > > On a dual PIII-550 with 512 MB of memory, ext3, and a RAID-0+1 (four 40G > 7200rpm IBM IDE Deathstar disks, 64k chunk-size on the RAID-0), I get: > > $ time for i in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do mkdir $i; for j in > {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do dd if=/dev/zero of=$j/$i > bs=1k count=4; done done > > real 0m5.024s > My systems are very different than what you describe above but here are some data points for reference. BTW, should that not be "of=$i/$j"? For a Dual P3/1.4Gig with 3x10000rpm SCSI drives running software raid5 and ext3 on a 2.4.18 (Redhat 7.3 2.4.18-17.7) kernel: real 0m2.217s For a P3/1Gig with 2x10000rpm SCSI drive running software raid1 and ext3 on a stock 2.4.18 kernel: real 0m3.349s Stephen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee @ 2002-10-29 15:39 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 16:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 21:08 ` Trent Piepho 0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Adam Luter @ 2002-10-29 15:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-raid On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 07:16:26AM -0800, Stephen Lee wrote: > > real 0m5.024s > > > > My systems are very different than what you describe above but here are > some data points for reference. BTW, should that not be "of=$i/$j"? > > For a Dual P3/1.4Gig with 3x10000rpm SCSI drives running software raid5 > and ext3 on a 2.4.18 (Redhat 7.3 2.4.18-17.7) kernel: > > real 0m2.217s > > For a P3/1Gig with 2x10000rpm SCSI drive running software raid1 and ext3 > on a stock 2.4.18 kernel: > > real 0m3.349s #!/bin/sh time for i in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} do mkdir $i for j in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} do dd if=/dev/zero of=$i/$j bs=1k count=4 2>/dev/null done done If everyone else is going to start squirting testosterone around, then I'll add my share: The above code, made an average time of about 3.7s . This is with raid-5 (soft) 2.4.20pre8 with 4 IDE drives (Ibm 120 gig 7200rpm) running at/on a Promise ATA/100 card (so 2 drives per bus). Also, the filesystem is reiserfs, and running at medium-light load. Changing the above code to: #!/bin/sh time for i in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} do dd if=/dev/zero of=$i bs=1k count=4 2>/dev/null done (so that it writes them all to one directory), made the same time, 3.7s on average. In fact, adding another 0..9 onto that loop only changed the average time to 44 seconds. For comparison the same tests on my system drive, a Maxtor IDE 40 gig 7200rpm drive connected to the onboard IDE controller (and also reiserfs), resulted in 3.3 seconds, and 35 seconds respectively. My conclusions are: IDE is damn fast and reiser kicks ass with small files. Of course alternate conclusions are that my raid-5 array suffers from using two channels per drive (I know -- but when I put two promise cards they or linux has DMA problems) and that I'm still behind the pack when you throw 10krpm at me :) (2.2 seconds is nice!). But, I'll never be rich enough for SCSI. Back to the grind... -Gryn (Adam Luter) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 15:39 ` Adam Luter @ 2002-10-29 16:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 21:08 ` Trent Piepho 1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Stephen Lee @ 2002-10-29 16:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Raid On Tue, 2002-10-29 at 07:39, Adam Luter wrote: > On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 07:16:26AM -0800, Stephen Lee wrote: > Of course alternate conclusions are that my raid-5 array suffers from > using two channels per drive (I know -- but when I put two promise > cards they or linux has DMA problems) and that I'm still behind the > pack when you throw 10krpm at me :) (2.2 seconds is nice!). It's around 2.0 seconds if I direct stdout to /dev/null ;-) I also have a system using a Promise raid controller with 2x7200rpm ide drives in a raid1 configuration (AMD K7 1.4Gig, ext2, RH 2.4.2 kernel, Promises proprietary driver) and the same test produced a speed of 2.6 seconds. Stephen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 15:39 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 16:16 ` Stephen Lee @ 2002-10-29 21:08 ` Trent Piepho 1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Trent Piepho @ 2002-10-29 21:08 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: linux-raid@vger.kernel.org > If everyone else is going to start squirting testosterone around, then > I'll add my share: > > The above code, made an average time of about 3.7s . This is with > raid-5 (soft) 2.4.20pre8 with 4 IDE drives (Ibm 120 gig 7200rpm) > running at/on a Promise ATA/100 card (so 2 drives per bus). Also, the > filesystem is reiserfs, and running at medium-light load. Oh me too! dual P3 1Ghz, 1GB ram, 2.2.20RAID, ext2, Mylex extremeraid 2000 hardware RAID5, six IBM 36LZX 10k RPM 36GB U160 SCSI drives. 1.89 seconds same system, but mylex hardware RAID0 instead of raid5, still 1.89 seconds. same system, but with a 3ware 7850 with six maxtor 160GB drives.... 1.89 seconds. same system, but with two IBM 18LZX 18GB 10k RPM SCSI drives on an onboard adaptec U160 controller and linux software RAID0... 1.88 seconds. It seems disk+controller doesn't matter one bit for this test. Now a new system: dual AthlonXP1800, 1GB ram, 2.4.16, ext3, 3ware 7410 RAID0, two maxtor 160GB drives... 2.38 seconds Conclusion: either ext3 or the 2.4 kernel are slow, as the second machine as has PC2100 RAM vs PC133 and 1.5Ghz athlons vs 1Ghz pentiumIIIs. It should be faster, not slower. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee @ 2002-10-29 15:27 ` Antonello Piemonte 2002-10-29 15:42 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 16:19 ` Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk 2 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread From: Antonello Piemonte @ 2002-10-29 15:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jakob Oestergaard; +Cc: linux-raid On Tuesday 29 October 2002 14:14, Jakob Oestergaard wrote: > On a dual PIII-550 with 512 MB of memory, ext3, and a RAID-0+1 (four 40G > 7200rpm IBM IDE Deathstar disks, 64k chunk-size on the RAID-0), I get: > > $ time for i in {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do mkdir $i; for j in > {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; do dd if=/dev/zero of=$j/$i > bs=1k count=4; done done > > real 0m5.024s > > So, 5 seconds for writing one thousand 4 kb files *sequentially*. > > Note that I only put 100 files in each directory - if I put 1000 files > in one directory, performance would degrade (more significantly when the > number is, say, 10000). Dear Jakob, for a start I have set my "baseline" measurement: using a 10000 rpm IBM Ultrastar with Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter with 512Mb RAM and PIII-800 I can create 1000 4kb files in one directory (this case is what is going to happen in the real application) in abou 8secs using this: -- #!/bin/sh i=1 while [ $i -le 1000 ] do echo $i dd if=/dev/zero of=file_$i bs=1k count=4 i=`expr $i + 1` done exit 0 -- $ time sh write.sh ... real 0m8.388s user 0m4.037s sys 0m3.834s writing 10.000 files gives instead $ time sh write.sh real 1m46.499s user 0m40.096s sys 1m0.400s so a 10-folds increase of number of files gives about a 12-fold increase in "real" time ... I will play next with journaling mode (using data=ordered now) and post outcome here: thanks for your comments so far ! antonello ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 15:27 ` Antonello Piemonte @ 2002-10-29 15:42 ` Adam Luter 0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Adam Luter @ 2002-10-29 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-raid On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 04:27:32PM +0100, Antonello Piemonte wrote: > for a start I have set my "baseline" measurement: using a 10000 rpm IBM > Ultrastar with Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter > with 512Mb RAM and PIII-800 I can create 1000 4kb files > in one directory (this case is what is going to happen in the real > application) in abou 8secs using this: > -- > #!/bin/sh > > i=1 > while [ $i -le 1000 ] > do > echo $i > dd if=/dev/zero of=file_$i bs=1k count=4 > i=`expr $i + 1` > done > exit 0 > -- > > $ time sh write.sh > ... > real 0m8.388s > user 0m4.037s > sys 0m3.834s > > writing 10.000 files gives instead > $ time sh write.sh > real 1m46.499s > user 0m40.096s > sys 1m0.400s > > so a 10-folds increase of number of files gives about > a 12-fold increase in "real" time ... > I will play next with journaling mode (using data=ordered now) > and post outcome here: thanks for your comments so far ! > antonello Get rid of while loop in favor of the for loop, your spending alot of time with the shell! (It's bad enough this test involves spawning 10,000 copies of dd!). Also don't do an echo, and pipe dd's output to dev/null. You'll increase your numbers -alot- this way. (Especially if you are in a fb-console or xterm, I/O to the screen costs -alot- then). -Gryn (Adam Luter) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: raid 1 vs raid 0+1 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 15:27 ` Antonello Piemonte @ 2002-10-29 16:19 ` Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk 2 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk @ 2002-10-29 16:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jakob Oestergaard, Antonello Piemonte; +Cc: linux-raid <snip> > Note that I only put 100 files in each directory - if I put 1000 files > in one directory, performance would degrade (more significantly when the > number is, say, 10000). </snip> this is not, however, the fact with other filesystems such as JFS, XFS and ReiserFS -- Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk, Datavaktmester ProntoTV AS - http://www.pronto.tv/ Tel: +47 9801 3356 Computers are like air conditioners. They stop working when you open Windows. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-10-29 21:08 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2002-10-29 12:29 raid 1 vs raid 0+1 Antonello Piemonte 2002-10-29 13:14 ` Jakob Oestergaard 2002-10-29 15:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 15:39 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 16:16 ` Stephen Lee 2002-10-29 21:08 ` Trent Piepho 2002-10-29 15:27 ` Antonello Piemonte 2002-10-29 15:42 ` Adam Luter 2002-10-29 16:19 ` Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk
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