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    <title>topic Re: I/O behaviour on MSA20 in Disk Enclosures</title>
    <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/disk-enclosures/i-o-behaviour-on-msa20/m-p/4182875#M26825</link>
    <description>Hello J,&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;The states are likely because of the backup workloads. This is expected behavior in my view.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;When you see lots of transfers and low throughput, Backup Exec may be backing up user shares or a source that contains smaller files. 1k to 32k or so. This is when the disk heads have to do a lot of 'seeking' which costs time.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;When the amount of tranfers goes down and the throughput goes up is usually when large files are being backed up (large being multiple megabytes per file and higher)&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;To do some comprehensive tests, try testing with HP Library and Tape Tools. LTT allows you to build a 'known' data set on your filesystem containing known filesizes that you can use to do perfromance testing.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Note that 750GB disks are built for 'capacity' and not neccesarily for 'performance'.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Hope this brings some clarification.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;-Eric&lt;BR /&gt;</description>
    <pubDate>Mon, 21 Apr 2008 07:30:22 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:creator>Eric de Lange (MSE)</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2008-04-21T07:30:22Z</dc:date>
    <item>
      <title>I/O behaviour on MSA20</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/disk-enclosures/i-o-behaviour-on-msa20/m-p/4182874#M26824</link>
      <description>I am working with a customer who has an MSA20 (12 x 750GB SATA) in a single RAID 5 config. The MSA20 is hanging off of an SA6404 in an HP DL380 G5. Using Backup Exec CPS, we noticed 2 distinct "states" that the I/O produces (using Windows 2003 perfmon):&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;1200 disk transfers/sec&lt;BR /&gt;85ms write latency&lt;BR /&gt;120ms read latency&lt;BR /&gt;17 MB/sec throughput&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;600 disk transfers/sec&lt;BR /&gt;10ms write latency&lt;BR /&gt;8ms read latency&lt;BR /&gt;72MB/sec throughput&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;The CPS server is doing the same job in both situations. What is the "nature" of the I/O that would cause such odd numbers? Why does only 17MB/sec cause huge delays and transfers, while 72MB/sec is fine? We haven't seen the first situation lately, it seems to have settled down a bit. Thanks for any insight.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 18 Apr 2008 16:59:09 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/disk-enclosures/i-o-behaviour-on-msa20/m-p/4182874#M26824</guid>
      <dc:creator>JBartlett</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2008-04-18T16:59:09Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: I/O behaviour on MSA20</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/disk-enclosures/i-o-behaviour-on-msa20/m-p/4182875#M26825</link>
      <description>Hello J,&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;The states are likely because of the backup workloads. This is expected behavior in my view.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;When you see lots of transfers and low throughput, Backup Exec may be backing up user shares or a source that contains smaller files. 1k to 32k or so. This is when the disk heads have to do a lot of 'seeking' which costs time.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;When the amount of tranfers goes down and the throughput goes up is usually when large files are being backed up (large being multiple megabytes per file and higher)&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;To do some comprehensive tests, try testing with HP Library and Tape Tools. LTT allows you to build a 'known' data set on your filesystem containing known filesizes that you can use to do perfromance testing.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Note that 750GB disks are built for 'capacity' and not neccesarily for 'performance'.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Hope this brings some clarification.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;-Eric&lt;BR /&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 21 Apr 2008 07:30:22 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/disk-enclosures/i-o-behaviour-on-msa20/m-p/4182875#M26825</guid>
      <dc:creator>Eric de Lange (MSE)</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2008-04-21T07:30:22Z</dc:date>
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