SYA810 RAID Benchmarking Lab
Contents
Task
The machine 'scotland' is equipped with six 1.5TB disk drives. Partition 9 on each drive is unused. We're going to use these partitions to benchmark various RAID levels.
- Create a RAID array of the six partitions (/dev/sd[a-f]9) using the appropriate mdadm command(s).
- Create an ext3 filesystem on that array.
- Benchmark the array using the Winter_2009_SYA810_Block_Device_Benchmark_Scripts. Repeat the benchmarks at least 3 times -- more if the results seem to vary substantially.
- Stop the RAID array.
Important Notes
- Do not use any devices other than /dev/sd[a-f]9 as members of the array.
- Do not have any spare elements in your array.
- Make sure the system is quiet (not doing any background processing) when you run your tests.
Who's Doing Which RAID Level
Write you name on here according to RAID levels chosen in class.
RAID Level | Person |
---|---|
Append | |
0 | Milton Paiva Neto Script |
1 | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | Nestor Scripts |
1+0 | Kezhong Liang |
RAID 5+LVM |
Scheduling
Person | Date/time (YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM-HH:MM) | Tests |
---|---|---|
Chris Tyler | 2009-02-02 08:00-17:00 | Multiseat testing |
Chris Tyler | 2009-02-04 08:00-17:00 | Multiseat testing |
Nestor Chan | 2009-02-06 ??:00- 2009-02-06 ??:00 | Raid 5 with multi-size writing test
(change my time if u need a slot..) |
Milton Paiva | 2009-02-09 14:30-17:10 | Raid 0 |
Kezhong Liang | 2009-02-10 23:30 - 2009-02-11 15:30 | RAID - 1+0 |
Mohak Vyas | 2009-02-11 16:00 - ?? | RAID - 4 |
Results
Record your results here. A table would be nice!
- Author: Milton Paiva
- Raid Type: RAID0
- Files: 10
- Size: 10 GB
Scripts
#!/bin/bash # # Script first written by Nestor Chan - Bossanesta and modified by Milton Paiva Neto <milton.paiva@gmail.com> # Create 10 files with with 10 GBs fully of zeros time -p (for ((x=1; x<=10; x++)) do dd if=/dev/zero of=fakefile$x bs=1G count=10; done sync )
# this suppose to call all small script one by one, and to be run with nohup. # bug: it calls each script in background.. echo "Start Testing" free date echo "===================================" /home/bossanesta/test-10kb free date /home/bossanesta/test-1mb free date /home/bossanesta/test-100mb free date echo "Finish Testing"
[root@scotland raid0]# sh +x speedtest.sh
TEST1
10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.497 s, 241 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 42.6988 s, 251 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 45.4546 s, 236 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 43.6104 s, 246 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 45.3155 s, 237 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.858 s, 239 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 46.2515 s, 232 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 47.0685 s, 228 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 43.8201 s, 245 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.8941 s, 239 MB/s
TEST2
10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 41.8107 s, 257 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 45.8173 s, 234 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 45.3462 s, 237 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 45.1653 s, 238 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 46.6794 s, 230 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.382 s, 242 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.6695 s, 240 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 44.7078 s, 240 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 43.8667 s, 245 MB/s 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 46.4641 s, 231 MB/s real 460.54 user 0.00 sys 323.48
Final Results
- Create files
real 455.94 user 0.00 sys 324.02
- Delete files
real 2m40.236s user 0m0.000s sys 0m7.715s
Kezhong Liang
- Raid Type: RAID 1+0
- Test RAID 1+0 disk performance steps:
mdadm -C /dev/md9 -l1 -n2 /dev/sd[a,b]9 mdadm -C /dev/md10 -l1 -n2 /dev/sd]c,d]9 mdadm -C /dev/md11 -l1 -n2 /dev/sd[e,f]9 cat /proc/mdstat mdadm -C /dev/md12 -l0 -n3 /dev/md9 /dev/md10 /dev/md11 mkfs.ext3 /dev/md12 mkdir /media/raid10 mount /dev/md12 /media/raid10
- Run the scripts, and write down the result. After finished, delete the raid10 I've created.
umount /dev/md12 mdadm --fail /dev/md12 /dev/md9 mdadm --fail /dev/md12 /dev/md10 mdadm --fail /dev/md12 /dev/md11 mdadm --fail /dev/md9 /dev/sd[a,b]9 mdadm --fail /dev/md10 /dev/sd[c,d]9 mdadm --fail /dev/md11 /dev/sd[e,f]9 mdadm -S /dev/md12 mdadm -S /dev/md9 mdadm -S /dev/md10 mdadm -S /dev/md11
- The result of using my Script
The First Time | The Second Time | The Third Time |
---|---|---|
Read Rate: 204 MB/sec | Read Rate: 170 MB/sec | Read Rate: 204 MB/sec |
Write Rate: 102 MB/sec | Write Rate: 102 MB/sec | Write Rate: 93 MB/sec |
- The result of using Milton's Script
The First Time | The Second Time | The Third Time |
---|---|---|
72.2998 s, 149 MB/s | 69.5242 s, 154 MB/s | 74.3364 s, 144 MB/s |
71.5798 s, 150 MB/s | 68.4565 s, 157 MB/s | 76.9103 s, 140 MB/s |
78.171 s, 137 MB/s | 69.6763 s, 154 MB/s | 81.2547 s, 132 MB/s |
70.153 s, 153 MB/s | 69.0485 s, 156 MB/s | 74.9017 s, 143 MB/s |
74.2309 s, 145 MB/s | 69.2078 s, 155 MB/s | 71.7726 s, 150 MB/s |
73.7941 s, 146 MB/s | 73.1318 s, 147 MB/s | 69.8053 s, 154 MB/s |
74.8228 s, 144 MB/s | 69.0291 s, 156 MB/s | 75.1002 s, 143 MB/s |
72.4651 s, 148 MB/s | 75.5166 s, 142 MB/s | 70.8875 s, 151 MB/s |
74.2831 s, 145 MB/s | 74.2722 s, 145 MB/s | 72.1222 s, 149 MB/s |
72.935 s, 147 MB/s | 70.74 s, 152 MB/s | 71.1439 s, 151 MB/s |
real 751.44 user 0.00 sys 386.13 | real 943.22 user 0.00 sys 394.61 | real 980.07 user 0.00 sys 400.46 |
- Conclusion
I did this lab three times. I failed in the first time, because the sdf9 couldn't be used. Then I used 4 disks to do the lab, it succeeded. After I asked Chris, I found the problem. The sdf9 was used by another raid(md_d8, it is inactive), so I stopped it. Finally, I finished the lab. I compared the result with Milton's and my second times. I find the disk speed of the raid 10 is slower than raid0(it should be) and the speed using 6 disks is faster than 4 disks.
Mohak Vyas
- RAID type: RAID-4
# mdadm --create /dev/md8 --level=4 --raid-devices=4 /dev/sd[a,b,c,d]9 # cat /proc/mdstat ......... ......... ......... md8 : active raid4 sdd9[4] sdc9[2] sdb9[1] sda9[0] 619353600 blocks level 4, 64k chunk, algorithm 0 [4/3] [UUU_] [>....................] recovery = 0.7% (1505028/206451200) finish=49.9m in speed=68410K/sec # mkfs.ext3 /dev/md8 # mount /dev/md8 /mnt1 Run your performance script. My script creates 2000 100KB files. It took 1792.0 Seconds to create those files. Testing with Kezhong's script: The write disk performance: 68 MB/sec The read disk performance: 204 MB/sec