Date: Sat, 17 Oct 1998 10:37:34 +0200 From: Andreas Braukmann <braukmann@tse-online.de> To: hardware@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: IBM DDRS-39130 drive Message-ID: <19981017103734.L10960@paert.tse-online.de> In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.00.9810161514510.23004-100000@super-g.inch.com>; from spork on Fri, Oct 16, 1998 at 03:16:00PM -0400 References: <199810160432.VAA09147@austin.polstra.com> <Pine.BSF.4.00.9810161514510.23004-100000@super-g.inch.com>
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Hi, On Fri, Oct 16, 1998 at 03:16:00PM -0400, spork wrote: > Searching dejanews I've yet to find any negative comments on this > or other IBM drives, I'm hoping you won't find any, because our boxes are completely stuffed with IBM drives. (mainly DCAS 4.3 GB and this exactly DDRS 9 GB drive) > Hopefully they get along with the CMD controller. They do so far with our CMD 5440. I don't have really valuable results wether regarding 'real RAID'- benchmarks nor real stresstests. But nonetheless: The machine: Dual PPro 166/512, Intel-Board PR440FX, 256 MB RAM running 3.0-pretty-current-with-cam SCSI-Host: onboard Adaptec 7880 UW RAID: CMD 5440 with 64 MB Cache (4 SCSI-Channels) 5 x IBM DDRS-39130W S92A across 2 drive-channels as an RAID-5 raid-set. The set is divided into two redundancy sets (each ca. 17 GB) (two ca. 9GB filesystems on each) The bonnies: First, a single bonnie on the first red.-set's first filesystem: >haendel# bonnie -s 1024 -d . >File './Bonnie.360', size: 1073741824 >Seeker 1...Seeker 2...Seeker 3...start 'em...done...done...done... > -------Sequential Output-------- ---Sequential Input-- --Random-- > -Per Char- --Block--- -Rewrite-- -Per Char- --Block--- --Seeks--- >Machine MB K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU /sec %CPU > 1024 10397 97.9 9172 39.1 3857 20.3 5243 57.0 6025 20.1 147.7 6.0 Then, three bonnies (one GByte each) in parallel; two of them on the same filesystem as the first test and the third on the first filesystem of the second redundancy-set. (hmm, they're ponding on the same drives anyways, but I suppose that the drives have to seek a heck more ...) The three runs are overlapping a little bit (easy to recognize by a look at the seek-results), because I just startet them by hitting return in three shell-windows. > -------Sequential Output-------- ---Sequential Input-- --Random-- > -Per Char- --Block--- -Rewrite-- -Per Char- --Block--- --Seeks--- >Machine MB K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU K/sec %CPU /sec %CPU >1-of-3 1024 5510 59.2 6099 29.8 1606 11.3 1731 20.4 2562 9.9 76.2 3.3 >2-of-3 1024 5451 58.5 5887 28.2 1380 9.8 2219 26.0 2581 10.0 74.7 3.4 >3-of-3 1024 6672 69.2 5538 23.4 1506 10.9 2449 28.3 2923 10.6 150.3 6.2 >'sum' 17633 17524 4492 6449 8066 Ahh. The stripe-size is 128 kByte (from memory). The server provides file- and compute-services for our web-developers. A definately backdraw of the CMD-controllers is, that they only accept as few as 32 (sic!) tagged commands. That was really bad news for me, I wasn't able to extract this from the technical docs or any sales- / tech- representive. After switching to CAM, I noted the cam-console-message > (da2:ahc0:0:14:0): tagged openings now 32 Shortly after that David Greenman stated in a discussion regarding the selection of an RAID-controller for ftp.cdrom.com: DG> I had, too, chosen the CMD until I found out that it only supports 32 DB> tagged commands total. Maximally configured (45 drives), this means that DB> not only would the CMD controller be unable to queue more than one command DB> per disk, but in fact 1/3 of the disk drives would be completely idle at DB> any given time. hmmm. Since the load on our server will surely be not in class of 'ftp.cdrom.com' I currently suppose, that I can live with that. -ab -- /// TSE TeleService GmbH | Gsf: Arne Reuter | /// Hovestrasse 14 | Andreas Braukmann | We do it with /// D-48351 Everswinkel | HRB: 1430, AG WAF | FreeBSD/SMP /// ------------------------------------------------------------------- /// PGP-Key: http://www.tse-online.de/~ab/public-key /// Key fingerprint: 12 13 EF BC 22 DD F4 B6 3C 25 C9 06 DC D3 45 9B To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hardware" in the body of the message
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