At the risk of being rude, a quick search on Google for [zookeeper
performance] gives the following top hit:
http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/ZooKeeper/Performance
The very nice graph that Patrick did many moons ago is missing, but the link
to
http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/ZooKeeper/ServiceLatencyOverview
provides some very nice information.
I hate it when people give snarky answers about doing your homework before
asking in public, but it would be very easy to respond rudely to your
request. The Zookeeper mailing list is full of friendly people so I won't
say much more than that.
In general, when sending requests to mailing lists, you will receive much
more helpful answers if you demonstrate that you have done a bit of work
ahead of time instead of depending on the mailing list as your first
resource. This link has some good suggestions:
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
Making sure that you do this is very important on mailing lists where there
is less of a premium placed on politeness than there is on most Apache
mailing lists. In some mailing lists, asking a poorly researched question
will subject you to being roasted alive or ignored completely. This is a
sad fact of life and it turns lots of newcomers off, but it absolutely does
happen.
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 11:36 PM, vilobh meshram
<[email protected]>wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am working on a project where we are making use of Zookeeper.
>
> I wanted to know the maximum throughput Zookeeper can provide for
> read/write
> workloads.
>
> Also if there are any standard benchmarks which can be used to measure such
> throughput can be useful.
>
> Also if you can point me to some paper or documents which mention these
> details will be useful.
>
> Thanks,
> Vilobh
> Graduate Research Associate
> Department of Computer Science
> The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio
>