On 2014-10-14, Joakim Ziegler <joakim@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > So, if I use iozone -a to test write speeds on the raw device, I get results in > the 500-800MB/sec range, depending on write sizes, which is about what I'd expect. > > However, when I have an ext4 filesystem on this device, mounted with noatime and > data=writeback, (the filesystem is completely empty) and I test with dd, the > results are less encouraging: My first question would be, why not test the filesystem with iozone too? (And/or, test the device with dd.) You may or may not come up with the same results, but at least someone can't come back and blame your testing methodology for the odd results. (Just as an aside, if your 6.4 box is on a public network, you should probably consider updating it as well, since many security and bug fixes have been issued since 6.4 was released.) If you are still getting poor results from ext4, you have at least two more options. ==Check with the ext4 mailing list; they're usually pretty helpful. ==Try your tests against xfs. Try to make sure your tests are replicating your use cases as closely as you can manage; you wouldn't want to pick a filesystem based on a test that doesn't actually replicate how you're going to use the fs. --keith -- kkeller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos