Thanks for the awesome advice folks. Until I can go larger scale (50+ SATA disks), I’m thinking my best option here is to just swap out these 1TB SATA disks with 1TB SSDs. Am I oversimplifying the short term solution?
Thanks,
-- Kenneth Van Alstyne Systems Architect Knight Point Systems, LLC Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business 1775 Wiehle Avenue Suite 101 | Reston, VA 20190 c: 228-547-8045 f: 571-266-3106 DHS EAGLE II Prime Contractor: FC1 SDVOSB Track GSA Schedule 70 SDVOSB: GS-35F-0646S GSA MOBIS Schedule: GS-10F-0404Y ISO 20000 / ISO 27001
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On Aug 31, 2015, at 7:29 PM, Christian Balzer < chibi@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello,On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 12:28:15 -0500 Kenneth Van Alstyne wrote:In addition to the spot on comments by Warren and Quentin, verify this bywatching your nodes with atop, iostat, etc. The culprit (HDDs) should be plainly visible.More inline:Christian, et al:
Sorry for the lack of information. I wasn’t sure what of our hardware specifications or Ceph configuration was useful information at this point. Thanks for the feedback — any feedback, is appreciated at this point, as I’ve been beating my head against a wall trying to figure out what’s going on. (If anything. Maybe the spindle count is indeed our upper limit or our SSDs really suck? :-) )
Your SSDs aren't the problem.To directly address your questions, see answers below: - CBT is the Ceph Benchmarking Tool. Since my question was more generic rather than with CBT itself, it was probably more useful to post in the ceph-users list rather than cbt. - 8 Cores are from 2x quad core Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2609 0 @ 2.40GHz
Not your problem either. - The SSDs are indeed Intel S3500s. I agree — not ideal, but supposedly capable of up to 75,000 random 4KB reads/writes. Throughput and longevity is quite low for an SSD, rated at about 400MB/s reads and 100MB/s writes, though. When we added these as journals in front of the SATA spindles, both VM performance and rados benchmark numbers were relatively unchanged.
The only thing relevant in regards to journal SSDs is the sequential writespeed (SYNC), they don't seek and normally don't get read either.This is why a 200GB DC S3700 is a better journal SSD than the 200GB S3710which is faster in any other aspect but sequential writes. ^o^Latency should have gone down with the SSD journals in place, but that'stheir main function/benefit. - Regarding throughput vs iops, indeed — the throughput that I’m seeing is nearly worst case scenario, with all I/O being 4KB block size. With RBD cache enabled and the writeback option set in the VM configuration, I was hoping more coalescing would occur, increasing the I/O block size.
That can only help with non-SYNC writes, so your MySQL VMs and certainfile system ops will have to bypass that and that hurts.As an aside, the orchestration layer on top of KVM is OpenNebula if that’s of any interest.
It is actually, as I've been eying OpenNebula (alas no Debian Jessiepackages). However not relevant to your problem indeed.VM information: - Number = 15 - Worload = Mixed (I know, I know — that’s as vague of an answer as they come) A handful of VMs are running some MySQL databases and some web applications in Apache Tomcat. One is running a syslog server. Everything else is mostly static web page serving for a low number of users.
As others have mentioned, would you expect this load to work well withjust 2 HDDs and via NFS to introduce network latency?I can duplicate the blocked request issue pretty consistently, just by running something simple like a “yum -y update” in one VM. While that is running, ceph -w and ceph -s show the following: root@dashboard:~# ceph -s cluster f79d8c2a-3c14-49be-942d-83fc5f193a25 health HEALTH_WARN 1 requests are blocked > 32 sec monmap e3: 3 mons at {storage-1=10.0.0.1:6789/0,storage-2=10.0.0.2:6789/0,storage-3=10.0.0.3:6789/0} election epoch 136, quorum 0,1,2 storage-1,storage-2,storage-3 osdmap e75590: 6 osds: 6 up, 6 in pgmap v3495103: 224 pgs, 1 pools, 826 GB data, 225 kobjects 2700 GB used, 2870 GB / 5571 GB avail 224 active+clean client io 3292 B/s rd, 2623 kB/s wr, 81 op/s
[snip]466 kB/s rd, 1863 kB/s wr, 148 op/s
This is a good sample, unless your reads can be satisfied from page cacheon your storage nodes or inside your VMs (more memory for the VMs may helphere), they are competing (seeks) with your write requests. So yeah, thisis probably as good as it gets.I never seem to get anywhere near 300 op/s. If spindle count is indeed the problem, is there anything else I can do to improve caching or I/O coalescing to deal with my crippling IOP limit due to the low number of spindles?
Other than replacing spindles with SSDs, not really. Your client workload is too mixed for anything else but that or massivelymore spindles.On the other hand, I have a cluster with very few OSDs (4!), hundreds ofVMs and typical activities like this: 11750 kB/s wr, 1426 op/s.Note the lack of writes, all these VMs run the same OS/application and arebasically write only. Adding to that the OSDs are actually RAIDs behind a 4GB controller cacheand thus the "disks" aren't busy at all.However reads, like rebooting VMs, impact this cluster quite a bit.ChristianThanks,
-- Kenneth Van Alstyne Systems Architect Knight Point Systems, LLC Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business 1775 Wiehle Avenue Suite 101 | Reston, VA 20190 c: 228-547-8045 f: 571-266-3106 www.knightpoint.com DHS EAGLE II Prime Contractor: FC1 SDVOSB Track GSA Schedule 70 SDVOSB: GS-35F-0646S GSA MOBIS Schedule: GS-10F-0404Y ISO 20000 / ISO 27001
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On Aug 31, 2015, at 11:01 AM, Christian Balzer <chibi@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello,
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 08:31:57 -0500 Kenneth Van Alstyne wrote:
Sorry about the repost from the cbt list, but it was suggested I post here as well:
I wasn't even aware a CBT (what the heck does that acronym stand for?) existed...
I am attempting to track down some performance issues in a Ceph cluster recently deployed. Our configuration is as follows: 3 storage nodes,
3 nodes is, of course, bare minimum.
each with: - 8 Cores
Of what, apples? Detailed information makes for better replies.
- 64GB of RAM
Ample.
- 2x 1TB 7200 RPM Spindle
Even if your cores where to be rotten apple ones, that's very few spindles, so your CPU is unlikely to be the bottleneck.
- 1x 120GB Intel SSD
Details, again. From your P.S. I conclude that these are S3500's, definitely not my choice for journals when it comes to speed and endurance.
- 2x 10GBit NICs (In LACP Port-channel)
Massively overspec'ed considering your storage sinks/wells aka HDDs.
The OSD pool min_size is set to “1” and “size” is set to “3”. When creating a new pool and running RADOS benchmarks, performance isn’t bad — about what I would expect from this hardware configuration:
Rados bench uses by default 4MB "blocks", which is the optimum size for (default) RBD pools. Bandwidth does not equal IOPS (which are commonly measured in 4KB blocks).
WRITES: Total writes made: 207 Write size: 4194304 Bandwidth (MB/sec): 80.017
Stddev Bandwidth: 34.9212 Max bandwidth (MB/sec): 120 Min bandwidth (MB/sec): 0 Average Latency: 0.797667 Stddev Latency: 0.313188 Max latency: 1.72237 Min latency: 0.253286
RAND READS: Total time run: 10.127990 Total reads made: 1263 Read size: 4194304 Bandwidth (MB/sec): 498.816
Average Latency: 0.127821 Max latency: 0.464181 Min latency: 0.0220425
This all looks fine, until we try to use the cluster for its purpose, which is to house images for qemu-kvm, which are access using librbd.
Not that it probably matters, but knowing if this Openstack, Ganeti or something else might be of interest.
I/O inside VMs have excessive I/O wait times (in the hundreds of ms at times, making some operating systems, like Windows unusable) and throughput struggles to exceed 10MB/s (or less). Looking at ceph health, we see very low op/s numbers as well as throughput and the requests blocked number seems very high. Any ideas as to what to look at here?
Again, details.
How many VMs? What are they doing? Keep in mind that the BEST sustained result you could hope for here (ignoring Ceph overhead and network latency) is the IOPS of 2 HDDs, so about 300 IOPS at best. TOTAL.
health HEALTH_WARN 8 requests are blocked > 32 sec monmap e3: 3 mons at {storage-1=10.0.0.1:6789/0,storage-2=10.0.0.2:6789/0,storage-3=10.0.0.3:6789/0} election epoch 128, quorum 0,1,2 storage-1,storage-2,storage-3 osdmap e69615: 6 osds: 6 up, 6 in pgmap v3148541: 224 pgs, 1 pools, 819 GB
256 or 512 PGs would have been the "correct" number here, but that's of little importance.
data, 227 kobjects 2726 GB used, 2844 GB / 5571 GB avail 224 active+clean client io 3957 B/s rd, 3494 kB/s wr, 30 op/s
That's a lot of data being written for a tiny cluster like yours. Looking at your nodes with atop or similar tools will likely reveal that your HDDs are quite the busy beavers and can't keep up.
Also prolonged values from "ceph -w" might be educational.
Regards,
Christian
Of note, on the other list, I was asked to provide the following: - ceph version 0.94.1 (e4bfad3a3c51054df7e537a724c8d0bf9be972ff) - The SSD is split into 8GB partitions. These 8GB partitions are used as journal devices, specified in /etc/ceph/ceph.conf. For example: [osd.0] host = storage-1 osd journal = /dev/mapper/INTEL_SSDSC2BB120G4_CVWL4363006R120LGNp1 - rbd_cache is enabled and qemu cache is set to “writeback" - rbd_concurrent_management_ops is unset, so it appears the default is “10”
Thanks,
-- Kenneth Van Alstyne Systems Architect Knight Point Systems, LLC Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business 1775 Wiehle Avenue Suite 101 | Reston, VA 20190 c: 228-547-8045 f: 571-266-3106 www.knightpoint.com DHS EAGLE II Prime Contractor: FC1 SDVOSB Track GSA Schedule 70 SDVOSB: GS-35F-0646S GSA MOBIS Schedule: GS-10F-0404Y ISO 20000 / ISO 27001
Notice: This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, copy, use, disclosure, or distribution is STRICTLY prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the original message.
-- Christian Balzer Network/Systems Engineer chibi@xxxxxxx Global OnLine Japan/Fusion Communications http://www.gol.com/
-- Christian Balzer Network/Systems Engineer chibi@xxxxxxx Global OnLine Japan/Fusion Communicationshttp://www.gol.com/
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