Re: Why do database restores take so long?
2005-01-25 13:23:22
What does topas report during the restore about disk device busy?
Some things I would try, if I had enough of a test environment to try
it, is a DB restore from a disk backup instead of tape; if it takes
longer from tape, then the DLT is part of the problem.
If topas reports a lot of disk busy during the restore, I'd try breaking
the mirror before doing the restore, and reestablishing the mirror
afterwards. Cutting the I/O in half has gotta help somewhere....
Wanda Prather
"I/O, I/O, It's all about I/O" -(me)
-----Original Message-----
From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU] On Behalf Of
Tab Trepagnier
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2005 6:16 PM
To: ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU
Subject: Re: Why do database restores take so long?
Dave,
Our database disk system consists of four 18 GB SCSI disks in a split
(dual-bus) disk pod connected to a dual-channel LVDS adapter. The
Recovery Log in on another pair of such disks. One set of disks on one
bus holds the primary database and log volumes; two DB and one log disk.
Each DB/log volume is mirrored to an identical volume/disk on the other
bus. So the mirror read/writes occur on independent buses downstream of
the PCI slot. The database consists of four volumes per disk of about 4
GB each. All database and log volumes are defined on JFS2 file systems.
The LVDS adapter is the IBM 64-bit dual-channel adapter called "PCI DUAL
CHANNEL ULTRA3 SCSI ADAPTER", Part Number 09P2544.
The disks are "16 Bit LVD SCSI Disk Drive (18200 MB)", Machine Type and
Model = ST318305LC which I *think* is 15K rpm.
The server is a 2-way 6H1 64-bit 600 MHz with 4 GB RAM, tuned for just
about zero paging. TSM DB buffer pool is 1 GB.
Like I said, when backing up to our HP 4/40 DLT via HVD SCSI, topas
reports a consistent 11 MB/s, such that a typical backup takes just
about
45-50 minutes including the tape mount.
The restore took slightly over three hours; and the 3:1 ratio is not out
of line based on other responses.
Thanks.
Tab
"ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <ADSM-L AT VM.MARIST DOT EDU> wrote on 01/20/2005
11:27:02 PM:
> Can you provide a little more information? I would like to know:
>
> 1. What kind of disk subsystem are you restoring the data to?
> 2. How many disks, and what kind of disks are they?
> 3. How is the database laid out database volume wise?
> 4. Does the disk have write cache behind it?
> 5. What kind of controller do you have for the disk
subsystem?
>
> At 07:23 PM 1/20/2005 -0600, you wrote:
> >TSM 5.1.9.0 on AIX 5.2 ML4; DLT8000 media on SCSI
> >
> >Why do TSM database restores take so much longer than the backups?
Our
> >system backs up our 24 GB database to DLT in about 50 minutes with a
> >sustained rate of 11 MB/s reported by topas.
> >
> >Tonight I'm performing a database restore. It is occurring at an
average
> >rate of less than 1 MB/s with rare peaks no higher than 6 MBs. At
times
> >the rate is as low as 300 KB/s.
> >
> >I realize the system is writing data to disk rather than reading so
its
> >not doing as much caching, but these are new disks and I've seen them
> >stream write at better than 25 MB/s on the inner edge and as fast as
50
> >MB/s on the outer edge. So I doubt the disk is the problem.
> >
> >This restore has been running for almost 2-1/2 hours now and is about
90%
> >complete.
> >
> >This is the fourth or fifth time I've restored the TSM database in
the
> >seven years I've operated the system. I have never seen database
restores
> >exceed 1/3 the backup rate - sustained - on two different servers,
three
> >different media and going back to ADSM 3.1.
> >
> >Just curious.
> >
> >Tab Trepagnier
> >TSM Administrator
> >Laitram, L.L.C.
>
> Dave Canan
> TSM Performance
> IBM Advanced Technical Support
> ddcanan AT us.ibm DOT com
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