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Full Discussion: CIO/DIO and JFS2 read ahead
Operating Systems AIX CIO/DIO and JFS2 read ahead Post 302258298 by zaxxon on Friday 14th of November 2008 09:23:19 AM
Old 11-14-2008
pstat -a shows, like for example ps aux, only the number of current started aioservers, but not if they are busy or not. With nmon shift+a you see how many are really currently busy and this is on system with an app using AIO, going up and down. Often the maxreqs is forgotten to be configured somewhat large too so the app doesn't get errors regarding to hit the max of queued AIO requests (some "error 5" in Oracle for example).

Nevertheless, we will have to check out if the OP needs AIO at all, which he could and should find out. Maybe he uses it already, no idea. Maybe he offers us some more info to help him.
In our environments I used CIO as a kind of last ressort of tuning, when everything else with AIO and ioo tuning didn't help anymore.
 

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VFS_AIO_PTHREAD(8)					    System Administration tools 					VFS_AIO_PTHREAD(8)

NAME
vfs_aio_pthread - implement async I/O in Samba vfs using a pthread pool SYNOPSIS
vfs objects = aio_pthread DESCRIPTION
This VFS module is part of the samba(7) suite. The aio_pthread VFS module enables asynchronous I/O for Samba on platforms which have the pthreads API available, without using the Posix AIO interface. Posix AIO can suffer from severe limitations. For example, on some Linux versions the real-time signals that it uses are broken under heavy load. Other systems only allow AIO when special kernel modules are loaded or only allow a certain system-wide amount of async requests being scheduled. Systems based on glibc (most Linux systems) only allow a single outstanding request per file descriptor which essentially makes Posix AIO useless on systems using the glibc implementation. To work around all these limitations, the aio_pthread module was written. It uses a pthread pool instead of the internal Posix AIO interface to allow read and write calls to be process asynchronously. A pthread pool is created which expands dynamically by creating new threads as work is given to it to a maximum of 100 threads per smbd process. To change this limit see the "aio num threads" parameter below. New threads are not created if idle threads are available when a new read or write request is received, the new work is given to an existing idle thread. Threads terminate themselves if idle for one second. Note that the smb.conf parameters aio read size and aio write size must also be set appropriately for this module to be active. This module MUST be listed last in any module stack as the Samba VFS pread/pwrite interface is not thread-safe. This module makes direct pread and pwrite system calls and does NOT call the Samba VFS pread and pwrite interfaces. EXAMPLES
Straight forward use: [cooldata] path = /data/ice aio read size = 1024 aio write size = 1024 vfs objects = aio_pthread OPTIONS
aio_pthread:aio num threads = INTEGER Limit the maximum number of threads per smbd that will be created in the thread pool to service IO requests. By default this is set to 100. VERSION
This man page is correct for version 4.0 of the Samba suite. AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed. Samba 4.0 06/17/2014 VFS_AIO_PTHREAD(8)
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