On 03/06/2009 19:38, Bill Davidsen wrote:
John Robinson wrote:
On 02/06/2009 20:47, Keld Jørn Simonsen wrote:
[...]
In your case, using 3 disks, raid5 should give about 210 % of the
nominal
single disk speed for big file reads, and maybe 180 % for big file
writes. raid10,f2 should give about 290 % for big file reads and 140%
for big file writes. Random reads should be about the same for raid5 and
raid10,f2 - raid10,f2 maybe 15 % faster, while random writes should be
mediocre for raid5, and good for raid10,f2.
I'd be interested in reading about where you got these figures from
and/or the rationale behind them; I'd have guessed differently...
For small values of N, 10,f2 generally comes quite close to N*Sr, where
N is # of disks and Sr is single drive read speed. This is assuming
fiarly large reads and adequate stripe buffer space. Obviously for
larger values of N that saturates something else in the system, like the
bus, before N gets too large. I don't generally see more than (N/2-1)*Sw
for write, at least for large writes. I came up with those numbers based
on testing 3-4-5 drive arrays which do large file transfers. If you want
to read more than large file speed into them, feel free.
Actually it was the RAID-5 figures I'd have guessed differently. I'd
expect ~290% (rather than 210%) for big 3-disc RAID-5 reads, and ~140%
(rather than "mediocre") for random small writes. But of course I
haven't tested.
Cheers,
John.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html