I believe for a 15 drive RAID-6, where 2 disks are used forredundancy, the
correct mkfs would be:
mkfs -t xfs -d su=65536,sw=13 /dev/sdXX
Yes you're right, I replied a bit too quickly :)
Another thing to try is if it would help to turn disk cache writes
*on*, despite all warnings if the FAQ.
Thank you for your suggestions. Yes I have write caching enabled. And I
have StorSave set to "Performance". And I have a UPS on the system at
all times!
The information about barriers was useful. In years past I was running
much older firmware for the 3ware 9650 cards and that did not support
barriers. But it is true the current firmware does support barriers. I
also believe the 3ware StorSave "Performance" setting will disable
barriers as well -- at least it makes the card ignore FUA commands.
Anyway, I have mounted the XFS filesystem with the "nobarrier" flag and
I'm still seeing the same behavior. If you want to take a closer look
at what I mean, please go to this link:
http://sites.google.com/site/andrewl733info/xfs_and_dpx
At this point, I have tried the following -- and none of these
approaches seems to fix the problem:
-- preallocation of DPX files
-- reservation of DXP files (Make 10,000 zero-byte files named
0000001.dpx through 0010000.dpx)
-- creating xfs filesystem with external log device (also a 16-drive
RAID array, because that's what I have available)
-- mounting with large logbsize
-- mounting with more logbufs
-- mounting with larger allocsize
Again, I want to point out that I don't have any problem with the
underlying RAID device. On Linux itself, I get Bonnie++ scores of
around 740 MB/sec reading and 650 MB/sec writing, minimum. Over 10
Gigabit Ethernet, I can write uncompressed HD streams (160 MB/sec) and I
can read 2K DPX files (300+ MB/sec). DD shows similar results.
My gut feeling is that XFS is falling over after creating a certain
number of new files. Because the DPX format creates one file for every
frame (30 files/sec), it's not really a video stream. It's really like
making 30 photoshop files per second. It seems as if some resource that
XFS needs is being used up after a certain number of files are created,
and that it is very disruptive and costly to get more of that resource.
Why ext3 and ext4 can keep going past 60,000 files and xfs falls over
after 4000 or 5000 files, I do not understand.
|