Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2004 11:32:11 +0200 From: Alexander Leidinger <Alexander@Leidinger.net> To: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch> Cc: current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: performance of jailed processes Message-ID: <20040331113211.4aa71b8c@Magellan.Leidinger.net> In-Reply-To: <20040331095802.J84890@cvs.imp.ch> References: <xzpisgm46h7.fsf@dwp.des.no> <20040331095802.J84890@cvs.imp.ch>
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On Wed, 31 Mar 2004 10:00:14 +0200 (CEST) Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch> wrote: > > Hi DES, > > > Specifically, running a query against a remote MySQL server from > > inside a jail takes an order of magnitude more time than from outside > > the jail. Tcpdump shows that the TCP packets carrying the result are > > evenly spaced, so this is not a matter of the server timing out on a > > DNS lookup or anything like that. > > Could you try the following things ? Use libthr or libpthreads for mysql and > see if the results are still the same. Do the same test with linux-threads > (all our mysqls on 4.x with jails use linux-threads and we don't see any > problems) I just had a similar problem with MySQL on a system without jails (-current as of Mar 19), but with one IP-alias. Feeding the initial content of a DB from a 4.6 MB file needed too long (I aborted after two minutes). Binding MySQL to the main IP only didn't changed this. I recompiled with linux-threads and it finished importing the data after 20 seconds. I can't test more on this machine, since it is scheduled to go into production today or tomorrow, but I could add mysql to a test machine (with a more recent -current) and use the same file there if needed. Bye, Alexander. -- I'm available to get hired. http://www.Leidinger.net Alexander @ Leidinger.net GPG fingerprint = C518 BC70 E67F 143F BE91 3365 79E2 9C60 B006 3FE7
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