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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat How to Migrate from Single Disk to Many? (RHEL 4.6) Post 302363346 by home4ktt on Tuesday 20th of October 2009 05:22:08 AM
Old 10-20-2009
Lightbulb How to Migrate from Single Disk to Many? (RHEL 4.6)

I have a Red Hat Enterprise 4.6 virtual server built on 1 virtual disk running Oracle Applications on VMware ESX 3.5; the performance of the virtual server is not good because of IO bottlenecks. The ESX server is reporting minimal load, it's the virtual server which is struggling with disk IO because everything is on the one virtual disk.

I can create almost any number of virtual disks to spread the load across but I don't know what the best number and arrangement of disks would be or how to migrate the existing system off the original disk (which is too big and I plan to trash) and onto the new disk arrangement.

I have found out how to move the swap space onto a new disk using 'parted' and 'mkswap'. I tried it on a test system; I don't want to touch the live system until I am very clear about what I am going to do.

I was thinking about having a single new disk with three partitions for "/boot" (100MB), swap space (2GB) and a data backup area (xxMB). And then three (or more?) disks in stripe formation (using LVM) for performance (no fault tolerance required as the virtual disks would be on a RAID5 SAN) to put the main application on with another three-disk stripe for the Oracle database.

Unless I am forced into it, I don't want to create any additional servers to spread the load across. I just want to get better IO performance from the single server that I already have.

Any suggestions regarding the plan?
Remember I can create almost any disk arrangement I need (which is nice).
So what's going to give me the best performance?

And how do I actually migrate everything off the original disk?

Thanks for your suggestions and help.
 

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RAM(4)							     Kernel Interfaces Manual							    RAM(4)

NAME
ram - ram disk driver SYNOPSIS
/sys/conf/SYSTEM: NRAM ram_size # RAM disk size (512-byte blocks) major device number(s): block: 3 minor device encoding: must be zero (0) DESCRIPTION
The ram pseudo-device provides a very fast extended memory store. It's use is intended for file systems like /tmp and applications which need to access a reasonably large amount of data quickly. The amount of memory dedicated to the ram device is controlled by the NRAM definition in units of 512-byte blocks. This is also patchable in the system binary through the variable ram_size (though a patched system would have to be rebooted before any change took effect; see adb(1)). This makes it easy to test the effects of different ram disk sizes on system performance. It's important to note that any space given to the ram device is permanently allocated at system boot time. Dedicating too much memory can adversely affect system performance by forcing the system to swap heavily as in a memory poor environment. The block file accesses the ram disk via the system's buffering mechanism through a buffer sharing arrangement with the buffer cache. It may be read and written without regard to physical disk records. There is no `raw' interface since no speed advantage is gained by such an interface with the ram disk. DISK SUPPORT
The ram driver does not support pseudo-disks (partitions). The special files refer to the entire `drive' as a single sequentially addressed file. A typical use for the ram disk would be to mount /tmp on it. Note that if this arrangement is recorded in /etc/fstab then /etc/rc will have to be modified slightly to do a mkfs(8) on the ram disk before the standard file system checks are done. FILES
/dev/ram block file /dev/MAKEDEV script to create special files /dev/MAKEDEV.local script to localize special files SEE ALSO
hk(4), ra(4), rl(4), rk(4), rp(4), rx(4), si(4), xp(4) dtab(5), autoconfig(8) DIAGNOSTICS
ram: no space. There is not enough memory to allocate the space needed by the ram disk. The ram disk is disabled. Any attempts to access it will return an error. ram: not allocated. No memory was allocated to the ram disk and an attempt was made to open it. Either not enough memory was available at boot time or the kernel variable ram_size was set to zero. BUGS
The ram driver is only available under 2.11BSD. 3rd Berkeley Distribution Januray 27, 1996 RAM(4)
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