> > Seriously, all disks configured WriteThrough (spindle and SSD disks > > alike) > > using the dedicated ZIL SSD device, very noticeably faster than > > enabling the > > WriteBack. > > What do you get with both SSD ZIL and WriteBack disks enabled? > > I mean if you have both why not use both? Then both async and sync IO > benefits.
Interesting, but unfortunately false. Soon I'll post the results here. I just need to package them in a way suitable to give the public, and stick it on a website. But I'm fighting IT fires for now and haven't had the time yet. Roughly speaking, the following are approximately representative. Of course it varies based on tweaks of the benchmark and stuff like that. Stripe 3 mirrors write through: 450-780 IOPS Stripe 3 mirrors write back: 1030-2130 IOPS Stripe 3 mirrors write back + SSD ZIL: 1220-2480 IOPS Stripe 3 mirrors write through + SSD ZIL: 1840-2490 IOPS Overall, I would say WriteBack is 2-3 times faster than naked disks. SSD ZIL is 3-4 times faster than naked disk. And for some reason, having the WriteBack enabled while you have SSD ZIL actually hurts performance by approx 10%. You're better off to use the SSD ZIL with disks in Write Through mode. That result is surprising to me. But I have a theory to explain it. When you have WriteBack enabled, the OS issues a small write, and the HBA immediately returns to the OS: "Yes, it's on nonvolatile storage." So the OS quickly gives it another, and another, until the HBA write cache is full. Now the HBA faces the task of writing all those tiny writes to disk, and the HBA must simply follow orders, writing a tiny chunk to the sector it said it would write, and so on. The HBA cannot effectively consolidate the small writes into a larger sequential block write. But if you have the WriteBack disabled, and you have a SSD for ZIL, then ZFS can log the tiny operation on SSD, and immediately return to the process: "Yes, it's on nonvolatile storage." So the application can issue another, and another, and another. ZFS is smart enough to aggregate all these tiny write operations into a single larger sequential write before sending it to the spindle disks. Long story short, the evidence suggests if you have SSD ZIL, you're better off without WriteBack on the HBA. And I conjecture the reasoning behind it is because ZFS can write buffer better than the HBA can. _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss