On Mon, 2005-10-03 at 14:16 -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
> Jeff,
>
> > > Nope, LOTS of testing, at OSDL, GreenPlum and Sun. For comparison, A
> > > Big-Name Proprietary Database doesn't get much more than that either.
> >
> > I find this claim very suspicious. I get single-threaded reads in
> > excess of 1GB/sec with XFS and > 250MB/sec with ext3.
>
> Database reads? Or raw FS reads? It's not the same thing.
Just reading files off the filesystem. These are input rates I get with
a specialized sort implementation. 1GB/sec is not even especially
wonderful, I can get that on two controllers with 24-disk stripe set.
I guess database reads are different, but I remain unconvinced that they
are *fundamentally* different. After all, a tab-delimited file (my sort
workload) is a kind of database.
> Also, we're talking *write speed* here, not read speed.
Ok, I did not realize. Still you should see 250-300MB/sec
single-threaded sequential output on ext3, assuming the storage can
provide that rate.
> I also find *your* claim suspicious, since there's no way XFS is 300% faster
> than ext3 for the *general* case.
On a single disk you wouldn't notice, but XFS scales much better when
you throw disks at it. I get a 50MB/sec boost from the 24th disk,
whereas ext3 stops scaling after 16 disks. For writes both XFS and ext3
top out around 8 disks, but in this case XFS tops out at 500MB/sec while
ext3 can't break 350MB/sec.
I'm hopeful that in the future the work being done at ClusterFS will
make ext3 on-par with XFS.
-jwb