On 05/22/2013 12:31 PM, David Boreham wrote:
Device: r/s w/s rMB/s wMB/s avgrq-sz avgqu-sz await svctm %util
sdd 2702.80 19.40 19.67 0.16 14.91 273.68 71.74 0.37 100.00
sdd 2707.60 13.00 19.53 0.10 14.78 276.61 90.34 0.37 100.00
That's an Intel 710 being crushed by a random read database server
workload, unable to deliver even 3000 IOPS / 20MB/s. I have hours of
data like this from several servers.
This is interesting. Do you know what it is about the workload that
leads to the unusually low rps ?
That read rate and that throughput suggest 8k reads. The queue size is
270+, which is pretty high for a single device, even when it's an SSD.
Some SSDs seem to break down on queue sizes over 4, and 15 sectors
spread across a read queue of 270 is pretty hash. The drive tested here
basically fell over on servicing a huge diverse read queue, which
suggests a firmware issue.
Often this is because the device was optimized for sequential reads and
post lower IOPS than is theoretically possible so they can advertise
higher numbers alongside consumer-grade disks. They're Greg's disks
though. :)
--
Shaun Thomas
OptionsHouse | 141 W. Jackson Blvd. | Suite 500 | Chicago IL, 60604
312-676-8870
sthomas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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