Hello all,
Recently, we purchased a Dell/EMC AX150SC storage for the disk backup
option. We have some performance problems with it which are described in
the letter below (which I sent to my Dell/EMC support). Does anyone have
a similar setup and can tell if they see similar problems or were able
to get decent performance from this machine ?
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: AX150 performance problems.
Date: Mon, 05 Mar 2007 12:24:05 +0200
From: Yaron Zabary <yaron AT aristo.tau.ac DOT il>
To: michaelz AT bynet.co DOT il
Hello,
I have performance problems with the AX150SC we have. These are the
details:
. The AX150 is connected to a single Sun 280R server via an Emulex HBA.
. The Server is a Sun 280R with two 750Mhz CPUs and 2Gb RAM running
Solaris 9 (SunOS legato.tau.ac.il 5.9 Generic_118558-39 sun4u sparc
SUNW,Sun-Fire-280R). I applied all patches required by EMC for Solaris
9. The server also has four LTO2 drives connected to another dual-LVD HBA.
. The HBA is Emulex 9802 running the latest firmware (1.91a5) with
driver 6.10g. The HBA shares the 33Mhz PCI bus with a GigE card. The LVD
HBA has its own 66Mhz PCI bus.
. The AX150SC has 12 500Gb disks. Its Flare was upgraded to
02.20.150.5.022. All disks are in a single pool with a single hot spare.
Currently, there are two 2Tb LUNs defined (due to Solaris 2Tb
limitations). Only the first LUN is in use. Event log is empty. All
components are green on the view/component screen.
. /etc/system has the following lines (as required by EMC):
set sd:sd_max_throttle=20
set sd:sd_io_time=0x3c
set ssd:ssd_max_throttle=20
set ssd:ssd_io_time=0x3c
. The backup software we use is EMC Networker version 7.2.2 build
422. Networker uses the first LUN for disk bacckup (using advfile
device). The backups are then staged (copied) to the LTO2 drives.
. The problem starts when the server tries to stage savesets from the
disk while running backups. During such operations the read speed can be
as low as 500Kb/s. Write speed also drops from ~25Mb/s to ~10Mb/s. While
this happens 'sar -d' reports a huge number for average wait time for
I/O requests (over 1.5 seconds per request). Also notice the huge queue
(over 300 requests) and the large service time (~100msec). The numbers
below are 10 minutes averages:
sd60 99 306.6 190 11077 1508.4 101.0
sd60,a 99 306.6 190 11077 1508.4 101.0
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 350.0 187 10387 1769.8 106.1
sd60,a 100 350.0 187 10387 1769.8 106.1
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 348.3 194 10767 1690.5 102.0
sd60,a 100 348.3 194 10767 1690.5 102.0
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 311.7 199 13024 1470.7 99.0
sd60,a 100 311.7 199 13024 1470.7 99.0
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 364.3 209 10714 1644.8 94.9
sd60,a 100 364.3 209 10714 1644.8 94.9
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 375.6 193 10093 1840.4 103.0
sd60,a 100 375.6 193 10093 1840.4 103.0
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 346.1 197 11119 1653.3 100.4
sd60,a 100 346.1 197 11119 1653.3 100.4
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 341.2 197 11666 1628.1 100.5
sd60,a 100 341.2 197 11666 1628.1 100.5
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
sd60 100 339.6 196 11948 1629.5 100.8
sd60,a 100 339.6 196 11948 1629.5 100.8
sd60,h 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0
Please advice.
--
-- Yaron.
--
-- Yaron.
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