I had a similar problem. although not as severe as yours. Mine was mostly involving a very large directory which seemed to get sent back and forth constantly. 1.4 pre5 is running now and it seems much improved. My guess is that there are a number of improvements in 1.4 that will solve some of the issues you're facing. I'd try to benchmark with that and see if your results improve. At 07:31 AM 9/17/2008, Harald St?rzebecher wrote: >Hello! > >First: I'm no expert for GlustersFS, I just did some testing in the >last few weeks. > >2008/9/17 Stefan Boresch <stefan at mdy.univie.ac.at>: > > I have just finished my first steps with glusterfs. Realizing in > > principle what I wanted to do (including installation from source) was > > astonishingly easy; however, the performance is extremely poor. Thus, > > I'd appreciate comments and suggestions what to do/try next. > >[...] > > > The setup I have described is a first test for the eventual migration > > of NFS mounted home dirs to glusterfs in order to enhance data safety > > and availability (hence AFR). My problem is that for two typical use > > scenarios, the performance is not acceptable. My two "testcases" are a > > cp -a of a source tree including git repository of appr. 160MB from > > the local disk to the glusterfs filesystem ("CP-A") and a make > > statement in this source tree (in the remote glusterfs filesystem) > > when everything is up to date ("MAKE"); i.e., after make has checked > > all 800 or so source files it tells you that there is nothing to do. I > > am afraid my timings speak for themselves: > > > > CP-A MAKE > > local disk < 5sec < 0.3sec > > NFS (100MBit) 55sec+-2sec < 2sec > > glusterfs (I) 4m29sec 17sec > > glusterfs (II) 4m05sec 18sec > >160MB/5s = 32MB/s >160MB/55s = 2,9MB/s >160MB/250s = 655kB/s >your right, there is something wrong, that's a bit slow > >IIRC GlusterFS has a high latency when accessing files/metadata. >The new binary protocol to be introduced in the >1.4 release should improve that. >(http://www.gluster.org/docs/index.php/GlusterFS_Roadmap#GlusterFS_1.4_-_Small_File_Performance) >I'd suggest trying the test release of version 1.4 or waiting a month >or two for the new stable release and then try again. > > > (I) unpatched fuse.ko, (II) patched fuse.ko, both over the same network > > as NFS. Note that in (II) the modified kernel module was used > > with the default (distribution provided) libfuse library. > > > > Measurements are fairly reproducible, i.e., variations are at most +- > > a few seconds. As you can see from the volume specs below, I tried > > some performance options, but the timings, if anything, got worse. Based on > > the above timings, I also don't think that the patched fuse.ko is worth > > the pain. > > > > Some questions: (1) Would server side AFR > improve things? The servers can/could > > talk over dedicated GBit Ethernet with > jumboframes. Judging from the howtos, > > server side AFR is much more problematic > concerning (redundant) availibility of the > > service, but I first *have* to get > performance somewhere near the NFS levels before > > there is any sense in continuing. > >I'm not sure if the numbers are comparable. On write, Client side AFR >has to send the same data twice over the network to get it to both of >the two servers. On a slow network that has to have a very big impact >on performance. > >Would the setup described in >http://www.gluster.org/docs/index.php/NFS_Like_Standalone_Storage_Server >be comparable to your current NFS setup? >Did you try anything like that? > >Other suggested reading: >http://www.gluster.org/docs/index.php/GlusterFS_1.3_P2P_Cluster_with_Auto_Healing >http://www.gluster.org/docs/index.php/AFR_(Automatic_File_Replication)_-_Things_to_keep_in_mind_and_gotchas >There might be some information for what you are trying to do. > >IMHO, doing server-side AFR with automatic IP-Failover and some sort >of loadbalancing (e.g. telling half of the clients to use one server, >telling the other half to use the second one) might be a setup better >suited to your network (slow connection to clients, fast connection >between servers) without compromising on redundancy. > > > I should maybe add that the single client scenario is not realistic; the > > tests just reflect typical activities of my users and myself. The setup > > eventually should serve 8-10 users with homedirs of 10-50GB; some users > > often move GBs of data through their > > homedirs. This is / has not been without pain using NFS, but > > performance was acceptable so far. So even if I get my test scenario > > up to speed, would glusterfs be up to the real task ? > >On a "real" network it should be: >http://www.gluster.org/docs/index.php/GlusterFS_1.2.1-BENKI_Aggregated_I/O_vs_NFSv4_Benchmark >:-) >I just can't image who can afford that kind of >setup in a real world scenario... > >Harald St?rzebecher > >_______________________________________________ >Gluster-users mailing list >Gluster-users at gluster.org >http://zresearch.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users