linux-raid.vger.kernel.org archive mirror
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
* Reshape speed
@ 2009-01-14  0:05 Iain Rauch
  2009-01-14  0:52 ` Roger Heflin
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Iain Rauch @ 2009-01-14  0:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-raid

Hi,

I've recently assembled a new RAID 6.

When I assembled it, I had 3 disks and one missing.

I then added two disks.

The first disk was used to recover the originally missing disk.

The second disk is being used to grow the array.

The recovery went at about 45MB/s but the reshape is only around 11MB/s.

CPU usage is as follows:
 12.8   1398    root     [md1_raid5]
 2.0    7996    root     [md1_reshape]

Memory usage is as follows:
Type                    Percent Capacity    Free        Used        Size
Physical Memory         18%                 2.97 GB     661.03 MB   3.62 GB
- Kernel + applications 6%                              218.21 MB
- Buffers               0%                              7.67 MB
- Cached                12%                             435.14 MB
Disk Swap               0%                  0.00 KB     0.00 KB     0.00 KB
Disk Swap               0%                  0.00 KB     0.00 KB     0.00 KB

#uname -a
Linux edna 2.6.24-etchnhalf.1-amd64 #1 SMP Tue Dec 2 17:21:26 UTC 2008
x86_64 GNU/Linux

Why is the reshape so much slower? Where's the bottleneck?

Also, would it have been possible to do both these operations in one step?

-- 
Thanks in advance,

Iain

P.S. The reason the array was assembeled with a disk missing is explained in
other thread "RAID 6 recovery (it's not looking good)" which isn't finished
yet.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread

* Re: Reshape speed
  2009-01-14  0:05 Reshape speed Iain Rauch
@ 2009-01-14  0:52 ` Roger Heflin
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Roger Heflin @ 2009-01-14  0:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Iain Rauch; +Cc: linux-raid

Iain Rauch wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I've recently assembled a new RAID 6.
> 
> When I assembled it, I had 3 disks and one missing.
> 
> I then added two disks.
> 
> The first disk was used to recover the originally missing disk.
> 
> The second disk is being used to grow the array.
> 
> The recovery went at about 45MB/s but the reshape is only around 11MB/s.
> 
> CPU usage is as follows:
>  12.8   1398    root     [md1_raid5]
>  2.0    7996    root     [md1_reshape]
> 
> Memory usage is as follows:
> Type                    Percent Capacity    Free        Used        Size
> Physical Memory         18%                 2.97 GB     661.03 MB   3.62 GB
> - Kernel + applications 6%                              218.21 MB
> - Buffers               0%                              7.67 MB
> - Cached                12%                             435.14 MB
> Disk Swap               0%                  0.00 KB     0.00 KB     0.00 KB
> Disk Swap               0%                  0.00 KB     0.00 KB     0.00 KB
> 
> #uname -a
> Linux edna 2.6.24-etchnhalf.1-amd64 #1 SMP Tue Dec 2 17:21:26 UTC 2008
> x86_64 GNU/Linux
> 
> Why is the reshape so much slower? Where's the bottleneck?

Reshapes are expensive.

Rebuilds only have to read the other n disks and calculate parity and 
put it on the replaced disk.

Reshapes have to move data around to make a n+1 disk array from a n 
disk array, which means *lots* of reading and writing on all of the 
other n disks to make it look like it was originally built as a n+1 
disk array.     It is very likely that it will have to read every bit 
of the data, calculate parity and then rewrite it back into the 
correct new location for the entire array, so that adds an entire new 
write step for all of the disks, and on top of that adds a seek from 
the read location to the new write location onto the disk too.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2009-01-14  0:52 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 2+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2009-01-14  0:05 Reshape speed Iain Rauch
2009-01-14  0:52 ` Roger Heflin

This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).