[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] domU is causing misaligned disk writes
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 11:49:55AM +0300, Pasi Kärkkäinen wrote: > On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 01:09:58AM -0700, Tracy Reed wrote: > > Anyone know why my xen xvda devices would be doing (apparently) > > unaligned writes to my SAN causing horrible performance and massive > > seeking and lots of reading for page cache backfill? BUT writing to > > the device in the dom0 is very fast and causes no extra reads? > > > > I am running the 2.6.18-164.11.1.el5xen xen/kernel which came with > > CentOS 5.4 > > > > After spending a lot of time banging my head on this I seem to have > > finally tracked it down to a difference between domU and dom0. I > > never would have thought it would be this but it is extremely > > reproduceable. We're talking a difference of 4-5x in write speed. > > Reads are equally fast everywhere. > > > > I am using AoE v72 kernel module (initiator) on a Dell R610's to talk > > to vblade-19 (target) on Dell R710's all running CentOS 5.4. I have > > striped two 7200 RPM SATA disks and exported the md with AoE (although > > I have done these tests with individual disks also). Read performance > > is excellent: > > > > # dd of=/dev/null if=/dev/xvdg1 bs=4096 count=3000000 > > 3000000+0 records in > > 3000000+0 records out > > 12288000000 bytes (12 GB) copied, 106.749 seconds, 115 MB/s > > > > I dropped the cache with: > > > > echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches > > > > on both target and initiator before starting the test. This is great > > for just a single gig-e link. This suggests that the network is fine. > > > > However, write performance is odious. Typically around 20MB/s. It > > should be more like 70MB/s per disk or better (7200rpm SATA) and max > > out my gig-e with write performance similar to the above read > > performance. I mentioned above that these are unaligned writes because > > when running iostat on the target machine I can see lots of reads > > happening which are surely causing seeks and killing > > performance. Typical is something like 8MB/s of reads while doing > > 16MB/s of writes. > > > > HOWEVER, if I do the writes from the dom0 the performance is > > excellent: > > > > # dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/etherd/e6.2 bs=4096 count=3000000 > > 3000000+0 records in > > 3000000+0 records out > > 12288000000 bytes (12 GB) copied, 104.679 seconds, 117 MB/s > > > > And I see no reads happening on the disks being written to in > > iostat. Purely streaming writes at high speeds. > > > > I have had AoE working very well with Xen previously although not with > > this particular hardware/xen/aoe version. Also it occurs to me that in > > the past when I have done this I network booted the domU's and they > > got root over AoE using a complicated initrd that I cooked up. In the > > last year or so I decided that it was too complicated and went to > > booting my dom0's from compact flash with the AoE driver in the dom0 > > instead of the domU. I now handing the domU xvd's from the AoE driver > > in dom0. I strongly suspect that this is why things worked great > > before but stink now. Unfortunately I don't have a working network > > boot initrd setup like I used to and although I still have all of the > > code etc. it would take a while to set up. I don't want to run that > > setup in production anymore anyway if I can help it. > > > > I have tried manually aligning the disk by setting the beginning of > > data on the partition from 63 to 64 (although this is usually done for > > RAID alignment) and I have tried changing the disk geometry to account > > for the extra partition table which causes a half-block page-cache > > misalignment as described by the ever insightful Kelsey Hudson in his > > writeup on the issue here: > > > > http://copilotco.com/Virtualization/wiki/aoe-caching-alignment.pdf/at_download/file > > > > All to no avail. What am I missing here? Why is domU apparently > > fudging my writes? > > > > Please paste your domU partition table: > sfdisk -d /dev/xvda > > Are you using filesystems on normal partitions, or LVM in the domU? > I'm pretty sure this is a domU partitioning problem. > Also it's easy to verify.. add another disk (xvdb) to the domU, and use dd to write directly to non-partitioned disk! dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/xvdb bs=something count=whatever This shouldn't cause any un-aligned writes. Also make sure you try different block sizes.. 4k might be ok for testing max iops, but 64k or even 1024k is good for measuring max throughput. -- Pasi _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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