Sent via BlackBerry® from Vodafone -----Original Message----- From: Matthias Bethke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2007 17:28:35 To:gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Performance problem at writing big files and Multitasking Hi Daniel, on Saturday, 2007-02-10 at 12:49:14, you wrote: > I will give short overview what i have tried so far. > > 1. Trying different I/O Scheduler ( cfq anticipatory and deadline) > 2. Enabling Low latency kernel and Preemptible kernel > 3. Setting 1000 HZ for timer frequency > 4. Tried the new kernel 2.6.19-gentoo-r6 and even the testing version > 2.6.20-gentoo with core 2 enabled in processor type Oh, so it is a multicore CPU---sorry if you mentioned it already, I had deleted the start of the thread already when I read Benno's advice. In that case, try 100 Hz scheduling period as well. I've had very bad experiences with I/O and 250 Hz or higher on a dual Xeon. My guess is that it was a cache effect and therefore shouldn't happen on the Core2Duo, but it might still be worth a try. > As i am using Xfce i installed the diskperf-plugin which monitors disk > I/O. The monitoring is divided in disk-read and disk-write. > I recognized that every time when reading stops writing starts. So is > this staggering of writing to disk normal as the programs have to read > data they want to write to disk? On my previous machine i didn't > recognize such a behaviour. So you're reading and writing from/to the same disk? I'd expect that behavior then, because the I/O scheduler tries to satisfy requests with as little thrashing as possible. So if there are enough write requests queued up it may keep the HD busy writing for a while before reading the next chunk from somewhere else. cheers! Matthias -- I prefer encrypted and signed messages. KeyID: FAC37665 Fingerprint: 8C16 3F0A A6FC DF0D 19B0 8DEF 48D9 1700 FAC3 7665 �éí¢‹¬z¸žÚ(¢¸&j)bž b²