On Tuesday, 11 December 2001 at 15:34:37 +0100, Wilko Bulte wrote: > On Tue, Dec 11, 2001 at 11:06:33AM +1030, Greg Lehey wrote: >> On Monday, 10 December 2001 at 10:30:04 -0800, Matthew Dillon wrote: >>> >>>>> performance without it - for reading OR writing. It doesn't matter >>>>> so much for RAID{1,10}, but it matters a whole lot for something like >>>>> RAID-5 where the difference between a spindle-synced read or write >>>>> and a non-spindle-synched read or write can be upwards of 35%. >>>> >>>> If you have RAID5 with I/O sizes that result in full-stripe operations. >>> >>> Well, 'more then one disk' operations anyway, for random-I/O. Caching >>> takes care of sequential I/O reasonably well but random-I/O goes down >>> the drain for writes if you aren't spindle synced, no matter what >>> the stripe size, >> >> Can you explain this? I don't see it. In FreeBSD, just about all I/O >> goes to buffer cache. >> >>> and will go down the drain for reads if you cross a stripe - >>> something that is quite common I think. >> >> I think this is what Mike was referring to when talking about parity >> calculation. In any case, going across a stripe boundary is not a >> good idea, though of course it can't be avoided. That's one of the >> arguments for large stripes. > > In a former life I was involved with a HB striping product for SysVr2 > that had a slightly modified filesystem that 'knew' when it was > working on a striped disk. And as it know, it avoided posting I/O s > that crossed stripes.
So what did it do with user requests which crossed stripes? Greg -- See complete headers for address and phone numbers To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message