On 06/14/12 08:53, Andy Adamson wrote:
On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 11:17 AM, Jeff Wright<jeff.wright@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Andy,
We did not check the RPC statistics on the client, but on the target the
queue is nearly empty. What is the command to check to see the RPC backlog
on the Linux client?
Hi Jeff
The command is
# mountstats<mountpoint>
Thanks - we'll try this.
The RPC statistics 'average backlog queue length'
Have you tried iperf?
Not yet - we'll put this in the next round of testing.
-->Andy
Thanks,
Jeff
On 06/13/12 09:08, Andy Adamson wrote:
Chuck recently brought this to my attention:
Have you tried looking at the RPC statistics average backlog queue
length in mountstats? The backlog queue gets filled with NFS requests
that do not get an RPC slot.
I assume that jumbo frames are turned on throughout the connection.
I would try some iperf runs. This will check the throughput of the
memory<-> network<-> memory path and provide an upper bound on what
to expect from NFS as well as displaying the MTU to check for jumbo
frame compliance.
I would then try some iozone tests, including the O_DIRECT tests. This
will give some more data on the issue by separating throughput from
the application specifics.
-->Andy
On Tue, May 22, 2012 at 12:21 PM, Jeff Wright<jeff.wright@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Team,
I am working on a team implementing a configuration with an OEL kernel
(2.6.32-300.3.1.el6uek.x86_64) and kernel NFS accessing an NFS server
over
10GbE a Solaris 10. We are trying to resolve what appears to be a
bottleneck between the Linux kernel NFS client and the TCP stack.
Specifically, the TCP send queue on the Linux client is empty (save a
couple of bursts) when we are running write I/O from the file system, the
TCP receive queue on the Solaris 10 NFS server is empty, and the RPC
pending
request queue on the Solaris 10 NFS server is zero. If we dial the
network
to 1GbE we get a nice deep TCP send queue on the client, which is the
bottleneck I was hoping to get to with 10GbE. At this point, we am
pretty
sure the S10 NFS server can run to at least 1000 MBPS.
So far, we have implemented the following Linux kernel tunes:
sunrpc.tcp_slot_table_entries = 128
net.core.rmem_default = 4194304
net.core.wmem_default = 4194304
net.core.rmem_max = 4194304
net.core.wmem_max = 4194304
net.ipv4.tcp_rmem = 4096 1048576 4194304
net.ipv4.tcp_wmem = 4096 1048576 4194304
net.ipv4.tcp_timestamps = 0
net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies = 1
net.core.netdev_max_backlog = 300000
In addition, we am running jumbo frames on the 10GbE NIC and we have
cpuspeed and irqbalance disabled (no noticeable changes when we did
this).
The mount options on the client side are as follows:
192.168.44.51:/export/share on /export/share type nfs
(rw,nointr,bg,hard,rsize=1048576,wsize=1048576,proto=tcp,vers=3,addr=192.168.44.51)
In this configuration we get about 330 MBPS of write throughput with 16
pending stable (open with O_DIRECT) synchronous (no kernel aio in the I/O
application) writes. If we scale beyond 16 pending I/O response time
increases but throughput remains fixed. It feels like there is a problem
with getting more than 16 pending I/O out to TCP, but we can't tell for
sure
based on our observations so far. We did notice that tuning the wsize
down
to 32kB increased throughput to 400 MBPS, but we could not identify the
root
cause of this change.
Please let us know if you have any suggestions for either diagnosing the
bottleneck more accurately or relieving the bottleneck. Thank you in
advance.
Sincerely,
Jeff
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