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Date:      Tue, 07 May 1996 19:07:11 +0530
From:      A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
To:        "Andrew V. Stesin" <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
Cc:        hackers@freebsd.org, current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: lmbench IDE anomaly 
Message-ID:  <199605071337.AA138846231@fakir.india.hp.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Sat, 04 May 1996 13:55:44 %2B0300." <199605041055.NAA23197@office.elvisti.kiev.ua> 

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Following Andrew Stesin's suggestion I enabled flags 0x80ff80ff on the
onboard IDE controller.  IDE Disk transfer figures went up dramatically;
but the slowdown on simultaneous reads was still around.

Here are the figures:

(Machine configuration at end)

(The test cases involved running "lmdd" from LMBENCH on 
 the various disk devices and timing reads of 16MB of data.

i.e# ./lmdd if=/dev/DEVICE bs=BLOCKSIZE count=16MEG/BLOCKSIZE of=internal

Throughput for one lmdd reader process and two simultaneous lmdd readers are 
given below).

                        Per process                     Per process
Device  blocksize       KB/s            blocksize       KB/s
~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~       ~~~~            ~~~~~~~~~       ~~~~
        -- SCSI DISK --
        --single reader--
rsd0a   bs=1024         653.74          bs=8192         1312.31
                        682.66                          1268.36
                        677.52                          1361.95


        --two readers--
rsd0a   bs=1024         424.27          bs=8192         805.69
                        424.24                          807.64
                        --                              812.82

Looks like changing the block size for the read can double throughput.
Also, two readers yield better thoughput than a single reader process.
So far so good.
        
        -- IDE DISK --
        --single reader--
rwd0a   bs=1024         839.05          bs=8192         2392.08 (!!)
                        841.53                          2402.42 (!!)
                        841.85                          2402.45 (!!)

        --two readers--
rwd0a   bs=1024         199.38          bs=8192         251.83
                        218.38                          237.95
                        220.68                          238.50

The read rates for the single reader case are fantastic, however
disaster seems to strike when two reader access the same device
So I looked at the block device.

        --single reader--
wd0a    bs=1024         199.80          bs=8192         796.07
                        200.04                          795.06

        --two readers--
wd0a    bs=1024         200.04          bs=8192         795.60
                        200.33                          795.20

Hmm, block size makes a huge difference still.  Is this to 
be expected?  Also the two reader case and the single reader case
are around the same performance -- i.e. the buffer cache seems to
be working well.  Also note the 3x-4x slowdown when enabling the buffer
cache compared to the raw device read. 

Machine config
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FreeBSD 2.2-CURRENT #0: Mon May  6 12:16:33 IST 1996
     root@krill.india.hp.com:/usr/src/sys/compile/KRILL
...
CPU: Pentium (89.99-MHz 586-class CPU)
  Origin = "GenuineIntel"  Id = 0x525  Stepping=5
  Features=0x1bf<FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,MCE,CX8>
real memory  = 16777216 (16384K bytes)
avail memory = 14737408 (14392K bytes)
...
wdc0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7 irq 14 flags 0x80ff80ff on isa
wdc0: unit 0 (wd0): <QUANTUM MAVERICK 540A>, multi-block-8
wd0: 516MB (1057392 sectors), 1049 cyls, 16 heads, 63 S/T, 512 B/S
aha0: Rev 41 (AHA-154x[AB]) V0.5, enabling residuals, target ops
aha0: reading board settings, dma=5 int=11 id=7  (bus speed defaulted)
aha0 at 0x330-0x333 irq 11 drq 5 on isa
(aha0:5:0): "QUANTUM LPS1080S 1220" type 0 fixed SCSI 2
sd0(aha0:5:0): Direct-Access 1001MB (2051460 512 byte sectors)
sd0(aha0:5:0): with 2874 cyls, 8 heads, and an average 89 sectors/track
...


Koshy



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