Luke Lonergan wrote: > Stefan, > > On 3/10/06 11:48 AM, "Stefan Kaltenbrunner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>2 HBAs in the server, 2x2 possible paths to each LUN. >>6 disks for the WAL and 12 disks for the data > > > So - you have 18 disks worth of potential bandwidth, not factoring loss due > to RAID. That's roughly 18 * 60 = 1,080 MB/s. If we organized that into > four banks, one for each CPU and made each one RAID5 and left two disks for > spares, you'd have 12 disks working for you at 720MB/s, which is possibly > double the number of active FC channels you have, unless they are all > active, in which case you have a nicely matched 800MB/s of FC.
wrong(or rather extremely optimistic) the array itself only has two (redundant) FC-loops(@2GB )to the attached expansion chassis. The array has 2 active/active controllers (with a failover penalty) with two host interfaces each, furthermore it has write-cache mirroring(to the standby controller) enabled which means the traffic has to go over the internal FC-loop too. beside that the host(as I said) itself only has two HBAs @2GB which are configured for failover which limits the hosts maximum available bandwith to less than 200MB/S per LUN. > > >>>So, from 15 MB/s up to about 20 MB/s. > > > Gee - seems a long distance from 700 MB/s potential :-) well the array is capable of about 110MB/s write per controller head (a bit more half the possible due to write mirroring enabled which uses delta-syncronisation). WAL and data are on different controllers though by default. > > >>the IO-System I use should be capable of doing that if pushed hard >>enough :-) > > > I would expect some 10x this if configured well. see above ... > > >>interesting to know, but still I'm testing/playing with postgresql here >>not bizgres MPP ... > > > Sure. Still, what I'd expect is something like 10x this update rate using > the parallelism buried in your hardware. > > If you configure the same machine with 4 Bizgres MPP segments running on 4 > LUNs I think you'd be shocked at the speedups. that might be true, though it might sound a bit harsh I really prefer to spend the small amount of spare time I have with testing(and helping to improve if possible) postgresql than playing with a piece of commercial software I'm not going to use anyway ... Stefan ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly