Doing an upgrade on our storage which involved replacing all the 4TB disks with 16TB disks. Some hiccups with five of the disks being dead when inserted but that is all sorted.
So the system was originally installed with DSS-G 2.0a so with "legacy" commands for vdisks etc. We had 10 metadata NSD's and 10 data NSD's per draw aka recovery group of the D3284 enclosures.
The dssgmkfs.mmvdisk has created exactly one data and one metadata NSD per draw of a DS3284 leading to a really small number of NSD's in the file system.
All my instincts tell me that this is going to lead to horrible performance on the file system. Historically you wanted a reasonable number of NSD's in a system for decent performance.
Taking what the ddsgmkfs.mmvdisk has give me even with a DSS-G260 you would get only 12 NSD's of each type, which for a potentially ~5PB file system seems on the really low side to me.
Is there any way to tell ddsgmkfs.mmvdisk to create more NSD's than the one per recovery group or is this no longer relevant and performance with really low numbers of NSD's is fine these days?
JAB. -- Jonathan A. Buzzard Tel: +44141-5483420 HPC System Administrator, ARCHIE-WeSt. University of Strathclyde, John Anderson Building, Glasgow. G4 0NG _______________________________________________ gpfsug-discuss mailing list gpfsug-discuss at spectrumscale.org http://gpfsug.org/mailman/listinfo/gpfsug-discuss
