Date: Sat, 24 Jul 2010 16:35:21 -0400 From: Dan Langille <dan@langille.org> To: John Hawkes-Reed <hirez@libeljournal.com> Cc: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Using GTP and glabel for ZFS arrays Message-ID: <4C4B4E89.8040101@langille.org> In-Reply-To: <4C498024.7050106@libeljournal.com> References: <4C47B57F.5020309@langille.org> <4C48E695.6030602@langille.org> <4C498024.7050106@libeljournal.com>
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On 7/23/2010 7:42 AM, John Hawkes-Reed wrote: > Dan Langille wrote: >> Thank you to all the helpful discussion. It's been very helpful and >> educational. Based on the advice and suggestions, I'm going to adjust >> my original plan as follows. > > [ ... ] > > Since I still have the medium-sized ZFS array on the bench, testing this > GPT setup seemed like a good idea. > bonnie -s 50000 > The hardware's a Supermicro X8DTL-iF m/b + 12Gb memory, 2x 5502 Xeons, > 3x Supermicro USASLP-L8I 3G SAS controllers and 24x Hitachi 2Tb drives. > > Partitioning the drives with the command-line: > gpart add -s 1800G -t freebsd-zfs -l disk00 da0[1] gave the following > results with bonnie-64: (Bonnie -r -s 5000|20000|50000)[2] What test is this? I just installed benchmarks/bonnie and I see no -r option. Right now, I'm trying this: bonnie -s 50000 -- Dan Langille - http://langille.org/
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