On Nov 26, 2007 7:57 PM, Richard Elling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Joe Little wrote: > > On Nov 26, 2007 7:00 PM, Richard Elling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >> I would expect such iostat output from a device which can handle > >> only a single queued I/O to the device (eg. IDE driver) and an I/O > >> is stuck. There are 3 more I/Os in the wait queue waiting for the > >> active I/O to complete. The %w and %b are measured as the percent > >> of time during which an I/O was in queue. The svc_t is 0 because > >> the I/O is not finished. > >> > >> By default, most of the drivers will retry I/Os which don't seem to > >> finish, but the retry interval is often on the order of 60 seconds. > >> If a retry succeeds, then no message is logged to syslog, so you > >> might not see any messages. But just to be sure, what does > >> fmdump (and fmdump -e) say about the system? Are messages > >> logged in /var/adm/messages? > >> > > > > nothing with fmdump or /var/adm/messages. Your answer explains why its > > 60 seconds or so. What's sad is that this is a ramdisk so to speak, > > albeit connected via SATA-I to the sil3124. Any way to isolate this > > further? Anyway to limit i/o timeouts to a drive? this is just two > > sticks of ram.. ms would be fine :) > > > > I suspect a bug in the driver or firmware. It might be difficult to > identify > if it is in the firmware. > > A pretty good white paper on storage stack timeout tuning is available > at BigAdmin: > http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/features/hub_articles/tuning_sfs.jsp > But it won't directly apply to your case because you aren't using the > ssd driver. I'd wager the cmdk driver is being used for your case > and I'm not familiar with its internals. prtconf -D will show which > driver(s) are in use. > -- richard >
The previous message listed the sil bug. Its the sil driver, and thus sd* (as seen from the iostat) > _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss