Jack, I have a 3583-L72 with four LTO-1 drives connected via HVDS SCSI to a pSeries 6H1. I have two drives per SCSI chain.
Depending on the type of data, I see 15 MB/s per drive consistently, and with highly-compressible data, peaks as high as 40 MB/s. That performance is perfectly adequate for our little company. One trick I implemented back when the library was collocated, was to wire the drives "odd & even". That is, drives 1 and 3 were on one chain, and drives 2 and 4 were on the other. If you watch how TSM handles reclamation on a collocated storage pool, you'll see the wisdom of that configuration. On non-collocated pools it doesn't matter, and my other three libraries are wired "high & low"; that is, drives 1 and 2 on one chain and drives 3 and 4 on the other. Tab Trepagnier TSM Administrator Laitram, L.L.C. "Coats, Jack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent by: "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/23/2004 03:38 PM Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: Subject: TSM and LTO Throughput Ok, I have a winders 2K box with 6 SCSI-attached LTO-1's with TSM 4.2.3.1 but it has a dual xenon 1.7G set of processors, and 1G of ram with 2G of swap space. The LTO's are in a IBM 3483-L18. There are two LTO's on each of 3 separate SCSI chains (they are 160 adapters, de-tuned to 80 in the adapter BIOS, because the LTO's I have won't work at 160). But even at that two LTO-1's should not outpace a 80MB/Sec SCSI adapter. What kind of throughput are you folks seeing with SCSI attached LTO-1's? I am trying some timeing doing migrations right now. If others are interested I will report back. Why am I asking? I think I have some performance issues, just getting data to/from tape, and can't seem to figure out where to look to find answers! You guys being a 'similar user base' have some similar stats, that could tell me if I am working 'as designed' or far behind the power curve. TIA ... Jack