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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-3288?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12591200#action_12591200
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Raghu Angadi commented on HADOOP-3288:
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bq. Average Datanode Performance = Average Disk Performance (even if you have
more than one)
Would something like RAID0, RAID10 fix this? (assuming single reader).
bq. "Serial HDFS Performance"
Is this defined as serial performance as seen by one client?
bq. This seems like a reasonably common use case though not the typical
MapReduce case.
Example cases will be helpful.
For an application like HBase, what is more important : over all throughput
(transactions per sec) or latency of serial requests?
> Serial streaming performance should be Math.min(ideal client performance,
> ideal serial hdfs performance)
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HADOOP-3288
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-3288
> Project: Hadoop Core
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: dfs
> Affects Versions: 0.16.3, 0.18.0
> Environment: Mac OS X 10.5.2, Java 6
> Reporter: Sam Pullara
> Fix For: 0.18.0
>
>
> I looked at all the code long and hard and this was my analysis (could be
> wrong, I'm not an expert on this codebase):
> Current Serial HDFS performance = Average Datanode Performance
> Average Datanode Performance = Average Disk Performance (even if you have
> more than one)
> We should have:
> Ideal Serial HDFS Performance = Sum of Ideal Datanode Performance
> Ideal Datanode Performance = Sum of disk performance
> When you read a single file serially from HDFS there are a number of
> limitations that come into play:
> 1) Blocks on multiple datanodes will be load balanced between them -
> averaging the performance of the datanodes
> 2) Blocks on multiple disks in a single datanode are load balanced between
> them - averaging the performance of the disks
> I think that all this could be fixed if we actually prefetched fully read
> blocks on the client until the client can no longer keep up with the data or
> there is another bottleneck like network bandwidth.
> This seems like a reasonably common use case though not the typical MapReduce
> case.
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