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Operating Systems AIX Filesystem using Oracle and mirroring VG ? Post 302710703 by bakunin on Thursday 4th of October 2012 05:07:11 PM
Old 10-04-2012
filosophizer, it is impossible to teach someone the job over the net. funksen has given you some useful pointers already but if you lack the basics to even understand what he is telling you we can't help you. How to benchmark I/O is learned by understanding how storage technology works, how Unix kernels work, how disks are accessed, by which strategies relational databases (in your case Oracle) optimize disk access and probably some other areas of competence you seriously lack.

To learn all this funksen has probably read several books, a lot of documents plus had some years of experience. How is he supposed to transfer this accumulated amount of knowledge to you here in a few articles? This is impossible.

It is not ill will from our side, but there is probably only one way for you: learn starting from the basics, the same way as he did. Over time you will arrive at the same point as funksen, but neither without effort nor in short time. It took him some years of experience and it will take you the same time to know what he knows.

You come across like a first grader, eager to solve math problems involving advanced calculus and now expect the teacher to tell you how to solve it. In order for you to understand his explanation he would have to explain so many things which in turn will need explanation too, etc., ad infinitum, that you are probably best off pursuing a sound education in systems administration. This, alas, is beyond our scope here.

To finally answer your question:

Quote:
so what would the benchmark indicate, i mean how can we read it. If it indicates high I/O then after mirroring it would be even higher ? right ?
No, not right. It depends. It depends on so many things you can only find out by first benchmarking the system and then interpreting the values produced by these benchmarks that an answer is simply impossible.

It is not even clear your system is really I/O-bound as you claim: how have you analyzed that and by applying which methods did you arrive at this conclusion? Have you run filemon? vmstat? iostat? What is the OS level (different AIX versions need different tuning parameters)? What is the contents of "/etc/tunables/lastboot"? Which size is the SGA? What is the cache hit/miss statistics in Oracle?

The answers to all these (and a lot more) questions are (or could be) factors if it comes to the I/O-performance of a database. Given the info you have presented until now we could as well toss a coin and answer "friday".

bakunin

Last edited by bakunin; 10-04-2012 at 06:18 PM..
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Sys::Filesystem::Cygwin(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			      Sys::Filesystem::Cygwin(3pm)

NAME
Sys::Filesystem::Cygwin - Return Cygwin filesystem information to Sys::Filesystem SYNOPSIS
See Sys::Filesystem. INHERITANCE
Sys::Filesystem::Cygwin ISA Sys::Filesystem::Unix ISA UNIVERSAL METHODS
version() Return the version of the (sub)module. ATTRIBUTES
The following is a list of filesystem properties which may be queried as methods through the parent Sys::Filesystem object. device Device mounted. mount_point Mount point. fs_vfstype Filesystem type. fs_mntops Mount options. SEE ALSO
<http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using.html> VERSION
$Id: Cygwin.pm 128 2010-05-12 13:16:44Z trevor $ AUTHOR
Nicola Worthington <nicolaw@cpan.org> - <http://perlgirl.org.uk> Jens Rehsack <rehsack@cpan.org> - <http://www.rehsack.de/> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2004,2005,2006 Nicola Worthington. Copyright 2008-2010 Jens Rehsack. This software is licensed under The Apache Software License, Version 2.0. <http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> perl v5.10.1 2010-05-18 Sys::Filesystem::Cygwin(3pm)
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