Not that this will do much to track down the issue, but I have some more
case history.

Today I was tidying up some vdi disks on my host system (work system
running 10.04 w/ 2.6.31-17 on Core2 Duo E6750 2.66GHz 4GB ram).   A disk
to disk (two physical disks) copy of a 7.5GB vdi caused the load average
to climb up to about 8 today.  An rzip of the vdi image caused the load
average to climb to about 6.  It slowed down the primary system, and the
virtual boxes.  The system s that shared the spindle where the data was
being compressed was worst of all (obviously).  All systems were
sluggish but not unusable.

So I bought the vdi image home.  My home system (black) is an AMD
Athlon(tm) II X2 250 Processor at 3GHZ with 4 GB of ram and two 250GB
(hardware) mirrored disks where Ubuntu 9.10 w/Kernel 2.6.31-20  lives.
During the entire time that rzip was running the load average never went
about 1.7.  When it was finished it sank very fast to 0.14 whereas on my
work system after a peak it takes about 3 min to reach a "normal" level
of load of at least .    I know this is kind of like comparing apples to
hammers.   I don't have a "pure" 10.04 system at work or at home that
has enough disk space free do uncompress a 7gb image with out doing some
work to create a new disk and attach it to an existing system.

So I did the next best thing I could come up with.  On Violet (guest on
black) my 10.04 that has not had the kernel retrograded, I did a tar of
a folder containing 1.9GB of PDFs, images, mp3s, text, etc.   Almost
instantly violet went from 1.03 to 3.83.  Firefox had ha hard time
keeping up with my typing and right clicking for spelling checks.  It
took from 21:34 to 21:38 (while I was doing nothing but watching top)
for the loadavg1 to drop from 3.72 to 1.08.  I then did an rzip on the
tar file.  at 21:40 with a loadavg1 of 1.29 I started the test. It is
with great interest that I only saw the loadavg1 go to about 4.33 (max)
but the system was far more sluggish (a right click was a 4-5 second
delay) and top would freeze up  for several updates (2s/update) and then
rush to catch up.  It sopped zipping at 22:01.   Watching top I saw most
of the time %us was between 40 and 70, %sys was about 5-15.  The amount
of time needed to rzip the smaller 2GB of data was much longer (many
minuets) than it took  to unrzip 7gb of data.    I know that zip and
unzip are not symmetrical, but  20 minuets to about 5 and only dealing
with about 28% of the data?  It just doesn't seem right.

-- 
High load averages on Lucid while idling
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/574910
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to