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тАО03-21-2005 08:03 PM
тАО03-21-2005 08:03 PM
Hi Guys,
Can anyone provide data/links for following?
random reads - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
random writes - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
serial reads - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
serial writes - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
Thanks in advance.
Regards,
Paul
Can anyone provide data/links for following?
random reads - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
random writes - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
serial reads - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
serial writes - XP1024,FC60 and SC10
Thanks in advance.
Regards,
Paul
Solved! Go to Solution.
3 REPLIES 3
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тАО03-21-2005 11:35 PM
тАО03-21-2005 11:35 PM
Solution
The performance of the SC10 is directly related to the number and type of disks used since it is a JBOD.
The 2 SCSI ports can each do 80MB/s max.
A single disk can do 100-150 read or write IOs/s.
The FC60 can do round 170MB/s sequential and 6000 IO/s random backend read IOs (cache avoidance)
To the XP1024
Frontend/cache performance >3000MB/s or 500000 IO/s
Backendperformance (cache avoidance)
57000 IO/s read, 22600 IO/s write (8kB)
2000 MB/s read, 860 MB/sec write (64kB)
OK for you?
Cheers
Peter
The 2 SCSI ports can each do 80MB/s max.
A single disk can do 100-150 read or write IOs/s.
The FC60 can do round 170MB/s sequential and 6000 IO/s random backend read IOs (cache avoidance)
To the XP1024
Frontend/cache performance >3000MB/s or 500000 IO/s
Backendperformance (cache avoidance)
57000 IO/s read, 22600 IO/s write (8kB)
2000 MB/s read, 860 MB/sec write (64kB)
OK for you?
Cheers
Peter
I love storage
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тАО03-22-2005 11:17 AM
тАО03-22-2005 11:17 AM
Re: XP1024, FC60 and SC10 transfer rate
Hi,
Thanks Peter, I think that will do. Is there a way to check the actual random reads, writes?
Will iostat or glance do? Are there any other metrics?
Thanks,
Paul
Thanks Peter, I think that will do. Is there a way to check the actual random reads, writes?
Will iostat or glance do? Are there any other metrics?
Thanks,
Paul
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тАО03-22-2005 06:27 PM
тАО03-22-2005 06:27 PM
Re: XP1024, FC60 and SC10 transfer rate
Yes these are the tools to use.
On Windows or Linux it could be IOmeter.
A good spot to see sequential throughput is the switch port going to the array.
And of course, for the XP you can purchase Performance Advisor which gives you detailed and also historical data.
Cheers
Peter
On Windows or Linux it could be IOmeter.
A good spot to see sequential throughput is the switch port going to the array.
And of course, for the XP you can purchase Performance Advisor which gives you detailed and also historical data.
Cheers
Peter
I love storage
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