Re: pvmove speed

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Roy Sigurd Karlsbakk wrote:
I'm doing pvmove of some rather large volumes from a Dell Equallogic system to
Dell Compellent. Both are connected on iSCSI ....
----
I've never had very great speeds over a network. I've gotten the impression
that iSCSI is slower than some other network protocols.

Locally (RAID=>RAID) I got about 400-500MB/s, but the best I've gotten, recently, over a 10Gb network card has been about 200MB/s. Oddly, when I first got the cards, I was getting up to 400-600MB/s, but after MS started pushing Win10 and "updates" to Win7 (my communication has been between Win7SP1<->linux server), my speed dropped to barely over 100MB/s which is about what I got with a 1Gb card. I wasn't able to get any better speeds using *windows* single-threaded SMB proto even using 2x10Gb (have a dedicated link tween
workstation and server) -- but I did notice the cpu maxing out on either the
windows or the Samba side depending on packet size and who was doing the sending.

50MB sounds awfully slow, but not out of the ballpark -- I had benched a few NAS solutions @ home, but could rarely get about 10MB/s (usually slower), so gave up on those and went w/a linux server -- but still alot slower than I'd like (100-200MB/s sustained, but those figures may change w/the next MS "update"). But gave up on commercial, out-of-the-box solutions, and the 4x1Gb connect you have may be costing you more cpu than its worth... Problem I noted on 2x10G was too many duplicate packets -- so running 1x10Gb now but still maxing out around 200MB/s over an unencrypted SMB/CIFS session.

I'm not sure it could be an LVM problem given its local speed for pvmoves -- do you have some measurement of faster file I/O throughput using iSCSI over your
connections?


_______________________________________________
linux-lvm mailing list
linux-lvm@redhat.com
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm
read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/



[Index of Archives]     [Gluster Users]     [Kernel Development]     [Linux Clusters]     [Device Mapper]     [Security]     [Bugtraq]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]

  Powered by Linux