On Thu, Jun 27, 2013 at 08:58:06AM -0700, aurfalien wrote:
>
> On Jun 26, 2013, at 6:48 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 04:56:31PM -0700, aurfalien wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> Wondering if my log being just under 2GB is a bad idea.
> >>
> >> Noticing flush-253:2/kcopyd which is my XFS file system getting
> >> really high load avg and wait times via top).
> >
> > What has the log size got to do with something that is happening at
> > the block layer? What's your storage config?
> >
> >> Doing a simple rsync over NFS and after a bit, the system gets to a load
> >> of 24.... yikes...
> >
> > Let me guess - 24 nfsds blocked waiting for kcopyd to do it's stuff?
> >
> > Load average going up when the NFS server is busy generally means
> > your IO subsystem is heavily loaded - it's not uncommon to see large
> > NFS servers that are extremely busy sustain load averages over a
> > 100 (or even 1000) for hours/days on end....
> >
> >> Upon killing the rsync, I am seeing loads going down to sub 1
> >> after about 10 min. I have repeated this to verify 10 min.
> >
> > Sure. Processes blocked on IO contribute to the load average. Kill
> > the IO load, and the load average will return to nothing in 10-15
> > minutes.
>
>
> Not so fast my fine feathered friend.
>
> Same work load, same hardware.
>
> Only diff is;
>
> External log, its 2GB
> And its Centos 6.4 which was previously 5.9.
Oh, you're comparing behaviour between kernels 5 years in age
difference. Well, things change, and a change of load average for
the same workload between very different kernels is no unexpected.
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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