Visit Open-E website
Results 1 to 10 of 11

Thread: Expected speed for DSS setup

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Default

    I tryed iozone over NFS over GbE and I got about 90MB/s in the best reads.

    Also did a

    # time dd if=/dev/zero of=file4 bs=1024 count=10000000
    10000000+0 records in
    10000000+0 records out

    real 2m45.938s
    user 0m5.430s
    sys 0m31.710s

    which indicates over 100MB/s in over NFS

    But I expected above 500MB/s from the disk and controller specs..

  2. #2

    Default

    Are you using 1G network?? because if you do, then you are getting a good performance...
    If not, tell us what adapter, firmware, network??? give us more details...

    In 10G networks you will get over 500M only

  3. #3

    Default

    Yes Joey I'm using a 1G network

    The dss server has a
    Intel Corporation 80003ES2LAN Gigabit Ethernet Controller (Copper) (rev 01)
    connected to a 3com 4200G series switch
    The controller on the server side is a Intel eepro 1000

    But when I first posted I was refering to a way of measuring the internal raid speed
    The statistics graphs don't help me much in this case. I guess open-e could include the result of some benchmark tool (even hdparm) in future releases

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    86

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by HangaS
    I tryed iozone over NFS over GbE and I got about 90MB/s in the best reads.
    .......
    which indicates over 100MB/s in over NFS

    But I expected above 500MB/s from the disk and controller specs..
    Megabits (Mb/s) or Megabytes(MB/s)?

    If the Hitachi 7K1000 can get about 80MB/s, then 100MB/s in Raid5 is not too shabby....
    So I am not sure why you thought you would get even 500Mbit/s...


    I agree though that it would be nice to to have a Util on the DSS that could test the raw I/O performance.

    Kurt,
    What are the servers you are connecting to the NAS with?

    If you are running Windows try using the Intel NAS Perf tester:
    http://www.intel.com/design/servers/...rf_Toolkit.htm

    And if you want to test your GB Network, take a look at netspeed.exe from OptimumX
    http://www.optimumx.com/download/
    (Assuming you have another Windows Box to test against.)

    So far I think almost all of our speed issues we have narrowed down to the server NICs not auto negotiating properly.

    Rgds Ben

  5. #5

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by beng
    Kurt,
    What are the servers you are connecting to the NAS with?

    If you are running Windows try using the Intel NAS Perf tester:
    http://www.intel.com/design/servers/...rf_Toolkit.htm

    And if you want to test your GB Network, take a look at netspeed.exe from OptimumX
    http://www.optimumx.com/download/
    (Assuming you have another Windows Box to test against.)

    So far I think almost all of our speed issues we have narrowed down to the server NICs not auto negotiating properly.

    Rgds Ben
    Thanks.
    Think i have located the problem. The problem was located to the Areca 1261ML controller and/or the memory ( 2 GB ) on the Areca controller.

    Tested this by making a software raid directly connected to the motherboard ( Supermicro X7DWE )

    Works fine now. Transfering several 2 Gigabyte files give an average writespeed to the software raid-0 at 460 Mb/s ( 56 MB/s). This over a 1 gb line connected directly with twisted-pair.

    Is that a reasonable speed. Else, i will try thos tools. The graphical speed charts i Open-E also works fine i think.

    Kurt H

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •