On 08/20/2013 08:39 PM, Jeffrey Dunham wrote:
We have a customer that has been multi-threading behind multiple
servers and writing to our Master server. These writes come in the
form of heavy spikes (1k over 5 second intervals) very much burst
traffic and all the writes are adding new items to the same ou.
What is the platform? What version of 389-ds-base? How much RAM do you
have? What is the size of your database?
While we have plans to throttle them I had a few questions:
a) If they're writing to the same ou / updating the same indexes are
they blocked on one items success before another succeeds?
Yes.
So in this case multi threading behind multiple boxes does not give
them any performance impact. I would guess this is the case, but I
want to be sure. Because replication seems to be fine which goes
through a single thread iirc.
Replication on the supplier side or replication on the consumer side.
b) are there any performance tweaks that can help? I thought maybe
looking at nsslapd-threadnumber.
To speed up writes? That might help, but not much, since your
bottleneck is that only one write can happen at a time.
The first thing you should do is optimize your db and entry cache
usage. You can use the https://github.com/richm/scripts/wiki/dbmon.sh
script to monitor your cache usage, and find out how much RAM you need
for your caches, and find out how much RAM you have left over for other
tuning.
1) Try putting the db home directory on a RAM disk. By default, bdb
uses memory mapped files in /var/lib/dirsrv/slapd-INST/db. These have
to be flushed to disk. Change nsslapd-db-home-directory to point to a
RAM fs.
mkdir /dev/shm/slapd-INST ; chown nobody:nobody /dev/shm/slapd-INST ;
chmod 0600 /dev/shm/slapd-INST
Then shutdown dirsrv, edit /etc/dirsrv/slapd-INST/dse.ldif
in the dn: cn=config,cn=ldbm database,cn=plugins,cn=config entry, add
nsslapd-db-home-directory: /dev/shm/slapd-INST
NOTE: This will use the amount of RAM specified by nsslapd-dbcachesize,
so make sure you have enough RAM.
https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Directory_Server/9.0/html/Configuration_Command_and_File_Reference/Database_Plug_in_Attributes.html#Database_Attributes_under_cnconfig_cnldbm_database_cnplugins_cnconfig
2) Use different physical disks for your db directory, transaction log
directory, and server log directory. If you can afford it, use a disk
controller with a write back cache for the disk used for the transaction
logs.
3) If you can afford the possibility of data loss, you can disable
durable transactions.
-Jeff
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