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тАО12-30-2009 06:40 AM
тАО12-30-2009 06:40 AM
ML370 G6 - Speed reference raid 5
Hi,
we've got some performanceproblems with out ML 370 G6 Server.
The configuration is:
SmartArray P410i
4x 450 GB SAS 15K HDDs as a RAID 5 (1,2TB) - Array Accelerator activated
A performance test with HD Tune gives the following data:
Minimum Transfer Rate: 63,7 MB/sec
Maximum Transfer Rate: 138,3 MB/sec
Average Transfer Rate: 122,7 MB/sec
Access Time: 5.4 ms
Burst Rate: 431,4 MB/sec
Can anybody give me some referencedata.
Are these data ok?
we've got some performanceproblems with out ML 370 G6 Server.
The configuration is:
SmartArray P410i
4x 450 GB SAS 15K HDDs as a RAID 5 (1,2TB) - Array Accelerator activated
A performance test with HD Tune gives the following data:
Minimum Transfer Rate: 63,7 MB/sec
Maximum Transfer Rate: 138,3 MB/sec
Average Transfer Rate: 122,7 MB/sec
Access Time: 5.4 ms
Burst Rate: 431,4 MB/sec
Can anybody give me some referencedata.
Are these data ok?
3 REPLIES 3
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тАО12-30-2009 10:45 PM
тАО12-30-2009 10:45 PM
Re: ML370 G6 - Speed reference raid 5
Sounds valid even though each one of those 15K drives clock at over 120MB/s individually.
I get similar results on a DL380 G5, RAID 6 (6 7200rpm SFF SATA drives, P400 controller 512K), and various workstations with on-board RAID chips.
RAID levels 5 and 6 have quite a bit of an overhead on writes and much faster performance on reads; on top of it, the RAID controller's CPU can have quite an effect on write performance as it calculates parity on the fly; P400 and P410 aren't known for their speeds. To increase performance, you may want to use a faster RAID controller. Having more drives in a RAID set may also help - depending on the controller.
I get similar results on a DL380 G5, RAID 6 (6 7200rpm SFF SATA drives, P400 controller 512K), and various workstations with on-board RAID chips.
RAID levels 5 and 6 have quite a bit of an overhead on writes and much faster performance on reads; on top of it, the RAID controller's CPU can have quite an effect on write performance as it calculates parity on the fly; P400 and P410 aren't known for their speeds. To increase performance, you may want to use a faster RAID controller. Having more drives in a RAID set may also help - depending on the controller.
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Arthur C. Clarke
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тАО12-30-2009 11:57 PM
тАО12-30-2009 11:57 PM
Re: ML370 G6 - Speed reference raid 5
Sorry Alex. What is speed for raid5 with 3 hard disk 146Gb 10K and controller p410i-256?
I have find max write speed 26Mb/s for large file (500Mb). Is Ok this speed?
I have find max write speed 26Mb/s for large file (500Mb). Is Ok this speed?
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тАО12-31-2009 01:57 AM
тАО12-31-2009 01:57 AM
Re: ML370 G6 - Speed reference raid 5
"What is speed for raid5 with 3 hard disk 146Gb 10K and controller p410i-256?"
Theoretically - 20-50MB/s depending on OS and associated hardware.
"I have find max write speed 26Mb/s for large file (500Mb). Is Ok this speed?"
Yes although I wouldn't call 500MB a "large file". Try a file that's at least 5 times your server's RAM amount. E.g. if your server has 12GB RAM in it, use a 60GB files (or a 60GB sequence of files) to measure the throughput. Otherwise memory caching may affect your numbers and make them unreliable.
To increase the write speed to 40-60MB/s, increase the number of drives to 4-5.
To increase the write speed to over 100MB/s, use a different RAID controller (Areca, Hipoint).
Theoretically - 20-50MB/s depending on OS and associated hardware.
"I have find max write speed 26Mb/s for large file (500Mb). Is Ok this speed?"
Yes although I wouldn't call 500MB a "large file". Try a file that's at least 5 times your server's RAM amount. E.g. if your server has 12GB RAM in it, use a 60GB files (or a 60GB sequence of files) to measure the throughput. Otherwise memory caching may affect your numbers and make them unreliable.
To increase the write speed to 40-60MB/s, increase the number of drives to 4-5.
To increase the write speed to over 100MB/s, use a different RAID controller (Areca, Hipoint).
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Arthur C. Clarke
The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. By using this site, you accept the Terms of Use and Rules of Participation.
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