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06-03-2003 09:45 AM
06-03-2003 09:45 AM
L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
2.0gb ram, VA7100 Array attached. A N4000, single 750 cpu, 1.5gb ram. External disk array, Raid 1. A oracle
customer tracking system was moved over to the L3000 recently. User's are stating that it is alot slower now than on the N Class. It takes
2-3 minutes to get a report vs
10 seconds. I am taking cpu and memory utilization stats via glance now.
Does anyone have any advice on what I should look for? What parameters to tune?
Is a dual 550 cpu better than a single 750 cpu. I thought the L3000 was a better model than the N4000 (it is only 1.5 years old) It also has more memory, 2gb vs 1.5gb.
Any other advise is much appreciated.
Thanks to all who contribute!
I am posting the real time measurements also as suggested.
Real time measurements can be collected and pasted in with your next post:
sar -d 5 5
sar -u 5 5
sar -v 5 5
swapinfo ???tam
vmstat 5 5
sar -d 5 5
HP-UX B.11.00 A 9000/800 06/03/03
13:05:20 device %busy avque r+w/s blks/s avwait avserv
13:05:25 c1t2d0 2.99 0.50 4 28 5.20 6.92
c2t2d0 1.80 0.50 4 24 5.29 6.04
c4t0d1 3.19 0.50 4 64 2.79 11.12
13:05:30 c1t2d0 0.80 0.50 1 10 3.04 8.47
c2t2d0 0.60 0.50 1 8 4.47 10.71
c4t0d1 4.00 0.50 4 67 3.83 11.62
13:05:35 c1t2d0 1.20 0.50 2 16 3.56 6.52
c2t2d0 1.00 0.50 2 16 3.57 6.16
c4t0d1 1.60 0.50 2 29 1.78 9.84
13:05:40 c1t2d0 2.20 0.50 4 22 3.99 7.06
c2t2d0 1.60 0.50 3 20 4.10 5.59
c4t0d1 3.81 0.50 4 61 4.04 11.40
13:05:45 c1t2d0 2.60 0.50 5 40 4.42 6.03
c2t2d0 2.40 0.50 5 39 4.41 6.33
c4t0d1 2.20 0.50 3 48 1.92 9.86
Average c1t2d0 1.96 0.50 3 23 4.32 6.75
Average c2t2d0 1.48 0.50 3 21 4.44 6.30
Average c4t0d1 2.96 0.50 3 54 3.07 10.95
sar -u 5 5
HP-UX B.11.00 A 9000/800 06/03/03
13:09:46 %usr %sys %wio %idle
13:09:51 1 0 3 96
13:09:56 0 0 2 98
13:10:01 3 1 3 93
13:10:06 2 0 5 93
13:10:11 1 0 2 97
Average 1 0 3 95
sar -v 5 5
HP-UX B.11.00 A 9000/800 06/03/03
13:10:33 text-sz ov proc-sz ov inod-sz ov file-sz ov
13:10:38 N/A N/A 193/664 0 1991/5000 0 1561/5010 0
13:10:43 N/A N/A 193/664 0 2007/5000 0 1563/5010 0
13:10:48 N/A N/A 192/664 0 1998/5000 0 1557/5010 0
13:10:53 N/A N/A 192/664 0 1991/5000 0 1557/5010 0
13:10:58 N/A N/A 192/664 0 1885/5000 0 1555/5010 0
swapinfo -tam
Mb Mb Mb PCT START/ Mb
TYPE AVAIL USED FREE USED LIMIT RESERVE PRI NAME
dev 1024 0 1024 0% 0 - 1 /dev/vg00/lvol2
reserve - 1024 -1024
memory 1537 1106 431 72%
total 2561 2130 431 83% - 0 -
vmstat
procs memory page faults cpu
r b w avm free re at pi po fr de sr in sy cs us sy id
3 0 0 309892 93737 12 4 0 0 4 0 0 565 561 191 1 1 98
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06-03-2003 09:54 AM
06-03-2003 09:54 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
HTH
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06-03-2003 09:58 AM
06-03-2003 09:58 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
swapinfo -tam
total 2561 2130 431 83% - 0 -
Add more swap. Here is the procedure:
lvcreate -L #### -n swap -C y -r n /dev/vg##
NOTE: -L = mb
swapon -f -p 1 /dev/vg##/swap
'swapon' may not complain if maxswapchucnks is OK. If it doesn't like maxswapchuncks then it will tell you.
maxswapchunks = total swap / 1024 * swchunk
sysdef | grep -i maxswapchuncks
sysdef | grep -i swchunck
/etc/fstab
/dev/vg##/swap ... swap pri=1 0 1
Continue to monitor over time with these commands and note any dramatic changes.
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06-03-2003 10:06 AM
06-03-2003 10:06 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
I would post the kmtune output.
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06-03-2003 10:13 AM
06-03-2003 10:13 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
STRMSGSZ 65535
bufpages 0
dbc_max_pct 10
maxdsiz 0X40000000
maxfiles 2048
maxfiles_lim 2048
maxswapchunks 4096
maxuprc ((NPROC*9)/10)
maxusers 200
maxvgs 80
msgmap (MSGTQL+2)
msgmax 32768
msgmnb 65535
msgmni (NPROC)
msgseg (MSGTQL*4)
msgssz 128
msgtql (NPROC*10)
nfile 5000
nflocks (NPROC)
ninode 5000
nproc ((MAXUSERS*3)+64)
nstrpty 60
nstrtel (MAXUSERS)
nswapdev 25
semmni (NPROC*5)
semmns (SEMMNI*2)
semmnu (NPROC-4)
semume 64
semvmx 32768
shmmax 0X40000000
shmmni 512
shmseg 32
timeslice 10
unlockable_mem (MAXUSERS*10)
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06-03-2003 10:36 AM
06-03-2003 10:36 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
kmtune -q dbc_min_pct
For 2GB systems I have 5 for dbc_min_pct.
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06-03-2003 10:49 AM
06-03-2003 10:49 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Disparages of this magnitude between machines that should differ by at most a factor or 2 almost certainly have to be in the software.
How was the Oracle instance moved? I would do identical queries on the two boxes and do a sqlexplain. I strongly suspect that you are missing indices on the new box.
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06-03-2003 11:08 AM
06-03-2003 11:08 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Are you seeing any unusual or excessive errors in the syslog?
Does netstat -s return an unusual number of errors?
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06-04-2003 05:51 AM
06-04-2003 05:51 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
HP SCSI Adapter connected to a 3rd party external disk array via it's controller box.
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06-04-2003 05:52 AM
06-04-2003 05:52 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
HP SCSI Adapter connected to a 3rd party external disk array via it's controller box.
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06-04-2003 06:03 AM
06-04-2003 06:03 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Well if the L is fibre & the N is copper, that alone could account for the perf diff.
Fibre smokes copper EVERY time. You probably will NEVER reach the L perf until you start using fibre on the N.
Rgds,
Jeff
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06-04-2003 06:13 AM
06-04-2003 06:13 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Oracle application was moved on the weekend. Now instead of a timesheet query to take 1-2 seconds, it now takes 5-10
seconds. To save a record now takes 10-15 seconds, whereas on the other server (N Class),
it took virtually no seconds.
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06-04-2003 06:24 AM
06-04-2003 06:24 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
I think I confused this with an earlier post.
You should probably focus on disk I/O performance nonetheless.
Use glance for overall I/O stats & consider using fcmsutil tdX stat
where X=td instamce
to see if you're having fibre comm trouble as well.
Rgds,
Jeff
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06-04-2003 07:30 PM
06-04-2003 07:30 PM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
The kernel Params should be set identically, if this is the only application on the machine. Unless you get really tune-happy, the physical hardware is functionally the same between an L and an N. The differences are the SCSI vs. Fibre (Fibre should smoke the SCSI) and the processors. I would think that under heavy load the two proc should out-perform the single, but for a single query test, the 750 should return info faster.
If you don't find any kernel differences (use sysdef to get a quick look at both machines), then I would look at the data layout on the VA. Striping issues, mirroring issues, blown drive in a RAID-5 (if it supports RAID-5).
Someone above mentioned possible missing indeces. This could severely curtail your performance.
Hope something here helps shine some light.
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06-05-2003 06:43 AM
06-05-2003 06:43 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Does fcmsutil /dev/td0 nsstat have numbers other than zeroes for the error checks?
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06-05-2003 06:46 AM
06-05-2003 06:46 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
In checking the user forums and talking to a colleague about the N Class and another unix server server (and she confirmed this with HP also). The mincache=direct should be set in Oracle on
Datafiles and Indices and not set on archive logs, redo logs, app, oraexport and backup, providing the block sizes match, which they do on the L Class (slow server)
We might want to try this on the L Class.
Note: The N Class has no mincache=direct setting on any of the oracle mount points.
Comments please?
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06-05-2003 06:52 AM
06-05-2003 06:52 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
Depends on...
1) How the Oracle SGA is setup - If Oracle has a fairly large SGA that will do it's own buffering, then YES use mincache/convosync=direct
AND
2) The OS ver - On 11.0 it seemed to help IF the SGA was doing Oracle buffering. On an up-to-date patched 11.0 AND on 11i the difference is much less noticeable.
Consult with your DBA. If the SGA is small then I'd let the OS use the buffer cache. Caches *always* beat direct writes by a mile.
My 2 cents,
Jeff
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06-05-2003 06:54 AM
06-05-2003 06:54 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
8 drives with 1 hot spare.
The fsmsutil did not show any
error messages.
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06-05-2003 07:08 AM
06-05-2003 07:08 AM
Re: L3000 vs N4000 performance issue
and use
rw,delaylog,datainlog
for everything else Oracle.
About the biggest improvement I've seen was about 1.2x (on 10.20); under 11.0 about 1.1x
- this ain't gonna fix you.
Note that you have taken a 12x-18x performance hit. That's almost certainly got be software - SQL code - lack of critical indices.
A performance hit of about 5x - 7x MIGHT be seen going from RAID 0 to RAID 5 but even that disparity is too small to account for your problems.
If I assume absolutely terrible tuning I'll give that a 2x hit and if we multiply that by a 7x RAID 0 to RAID 5 hit, we are now in the 14x realm - which is about where your problems lie. I give this scenario a very low probabilty and thus I come back to SQL.
I would do this test and maybe we can get the hardware/tuning side of this out of the picture.
timex dd if=/dev/zero bs=64k count=1000 of=/u01/dummy.
(You can play with the bs and the size of the file but the idea is to get an idea of how fast these operations are done. You can also try using raw device nodes or convosync=direct,mincache=direct but they are going to be slower.)
If these transfer rates are far below what is expected then look to the hardware but otherwise start looking at Oracle.
You really, really need to get Glance on this box and look at things while they are bad.
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06-05-2003 07:34 AM
06-05-2003 07:34 AM