Hi - as you can see in your results the xdisk tool with 1 MB block size drove the V7000 up to 3.4 Gigabytes per second.
The reason I mentioned using 0x40000 for the hdisk max_transfer is because that is what the SDDPCM driver used by default and I have seen better V7000 performance with this value compared to the 0x80000 default that AIX MPIO uses.
You can leave the FC adapter at 0x100000 or you could change it to 0x200000. This tunable is independent of the hdisk one.
If you do reduce the hdisk max_transfer from 0x80000 to 0x40000 you can then compare the xdisk results now that you have already run it once.
Thanks
Dean
--- Post updated at 09:05 PM ---
Regarding your question of tuning max_xfer_size you can do it dynamically assuming your LUN's have multiple paths. (lspath to confirm)
can someone tell me a good site to go to in order to learn this. please do not recommen nay books because i dont have interest in that. if you know of any good sites with good straight forward explanation on how to split loads on machines that has excessive loading, please let me know
Also,... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
long time ago I posted something, but now, it is needed again :(
Currently, I am handling with a big NFS Server for more than 200 clients, this sever has to work with 256 NFSDs. Because of this huge amount of NFSDs, there are thousands of small write accesses down to the disk and... (3 Replies)
Hi to all,
I'm interested in finding an introduction about Performance Tuning under Unix (or Linux); can somebody please point me in the right direction?
Best regards (1 Reply)
Sorry,
This is out of scope of this group.But I require the clarification pretty urgently.
My Oracle database is parallely enabled.
Still,in a particular table queries do not work "parallely" always.
How is this? (9 Replies)
Hi All,
In last one week, i have posted many questions in this portal. At last i am succeeded to make my 1st unix script.
following are 2 points where my script is taking tooooo long.
1. Print the total number of records excluding header & footer. I have found that awk 'END{print NR -... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
From Googling, I found that the basics used for troubleshooting UNIX/AIX performance issues are commands like vmstat, iostat and sar. I believe these are generic commands regardless of what UNIX flavour is in used, only difference being is the format of the output.
In a real case... (2 Replies)
Please take a look at this system and give your analysis / advice. Can it be tuned to get a better performance?
We are not getting more hardware ressources at the moment.
We have to live with what we have. Application running on the system is SAS. OS is AIX 6.1
Let me know if you need output of... (7 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a Local zone , where users feel that performance is not good.
Is it wise to collect the inputs from the local zone rather than taking from the global zone.
And also Can I tune from Global zone , so that it will reflect in local zone.
Rgds
rj (2 Replies)
Overview:
Introduction
What Does Success Mean?
What Does Performance Mean?
Every Picture is Worth a Thousand Words
Work Like a Physicist
Work Like You Walk - One Step at a Time
Learn to Know Your System
Choose Your Weapons!
Tools of the Trade 1 - vmstat
A Little Theory Along the Way -... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bakunin
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
truncate
TRUNCATE(1) User Commands TRUNCATE(1)NAME
truncate - shrink or extend the size of a file to the specifed size
SYNOPSIS
truncate OPTION... FILE...
DESCRIPTION
Shrink or extend the size of each FILE to the specified size
A FILE argument that does not exist is created.
If a FILE is larger than the specified size, the extra data is lost. If a FILE is shorter, it is extended and the extended part (hole)
reads as zero bytes.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
-c, --no-create
do not create any files
-o, --io-blocks
Treat SIZE as number of IO blocks instead of bytes
-r, --reference=FILE
use this FILE's size
-s, --size=SIZE
use this SIZE
--help display this help and exit
--version
output version information and exit
SIZE is a number which may be followed by one of the following suffixes: KB 1000, K 1024, MB 1000*1000, M 1024*1024, and so on for G, T, P,
E, Z, Y.
SIZE may also be prefixed by one of the following modifying characters: `+' extend by, `-' reduce by, `<' at most, `>' at least, `/' round
down to multiple of, `%' round up to multiple of.
Note that the -r and -s options are mutually exclusive.
AUTHOR
Written by Padraig Brady.
REPORTING BUGS
Report truncate bugs to bug-coreutils@gnu.org
GNU coreutils home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>
General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSO dd(1), truncate(2), ftruncate(2)
The full documentation for truncate is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and truncate programs are properly installed at your
site, the command
info coreutils 'truncate invocation'
should give you access to the complete manual.
GNU coreutils 7.1 July 2010 TRUNCATE(1)