On Nov 09, 2007 19:11 -0700, Chris Worley wrote: > How do you measure/gauge/assure proper alignment? > > The physical disk has a block structure. What is it or how do you > find it? I'm guessing it's best to not partition disks in order to > assure that whatever it's block read/write is isn't bisected by the > partition. For Lustre we never partition the disks for exactly this reason, and if you are using LVM/md on the whole device it doesn't make sense either. > Then, mdadm has some block structure. The "-c" ("chunk") is in > "kibibytes" (feed the dog kibbles?), with a default of 64. Not a clue > what they're trying to do. That just means for RAID 0/5/6 that the amount of data or parity in a stripe is a multipe of the chunk size, i.e. for a 4+1 RAID5 you get: disk0 disk1 disk2 disk3 disk4 [64kB][64kB][64kB][64kB][64kB] [64kB][64kB]... > Finally, mkfs.ext[23] has a "stride", which is defined as a "stripe > size" in the man page (and I thought all your stripes added together > are a "stride"), as well as a block size. For ext2/3/4 the stride size (in kB) == the mdadm chunk size. Note that the ext2/3/4 stride size is in units of filesystem blocks, so if you have 4kB filesystem blocks (default for filesystems > 500MB) and a 64kB RAID5 chunk size, this is 16: e2fsck -E stride=16 /dev/md0 > It's important to make sure these all align properly, but their definitions > do. ... do not? > Could somebody please clarify... with an example? Yes, I constantly wish the terminology were constant between different tools, but sadly there isn't any "proper" terminology out there as far as I've been able to see. Cheers, Andreas -- Andreas Dilger Sr. Software Engineer, Lustre Group Sun Microsystems of Canada, Inc. _______________________________________________ Ext3-users mailing list Ext3-users@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/ext3-users