I'm pretty sure you consider those numbers to be bad then as I do.

50GB file on a VM (ESX 5)

 

While most of them are close to the once mentioned 5000 some are way below
and not close to what you expect from a good SAN.

Maybe it is more related to the VM though.

 

.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -fsequential -b8 -t4 -o2 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat

IOs/sec: 13634.10

MBs/sec:   106.51


.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -fsequential -b64 -t4 -o2 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat

IOs/sec:  6453.21

MBs/sec:   403.32

 

.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -fsequential -b512 -t4 -o2 -LS -BN
G:\Benchmarkfile.dat

IOs/sec:  1888.51

MBs/sec:   944.25

 

# Read Random, various blocksizes (8, 64 and 512 kb) 
.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -frandom -b8 -t4 -o16 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat 

IOs/sec: 44944.89

MBs/sec:   351.13


.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -frandom -b64 -t4 -o16 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat 

IOs/sec: 19339.86

MBs/sec:  1208.74


.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kR -frandom -b512 -t4 -o16 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat

IOs/sec:  2868.92

MBs/sec:  1434.46

 

# Write Random, various blocksizes (8, 64 and 512 kb) 
.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kW -frandom -b8 -t4 -o16 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat 

IOs/sec: 19250.84

MBs/sec:   150.39


.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kW -frandom -b64 -t4 -o16 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat 

IOs/sec:  7891.82

MBs/sec:   493.23


.\SQLIO.EXE -s120 -kW -frandom -b512 -t4 -o2 -LS -BN G:\Benchmarkfile.dat

IOs/sec:   965.55

MBs/sec:   482.77

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Johan Arwidmark
Sent: Dienstag, 22. Oktober 2013 21:52
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [mssms] SQLIO tests values?

 

There are no official numbers, we (the ECM MVPs) have been asking for years,
but so far nothing.

 

These numbers simply comes from my own testing at various customers. and
even though they are far from exact, they should give a rough estimate.

 

Shorthand, when you see a site server starting to perform sluggish, to take
several minutes to generate a policy, or long time to process incoming data,
long time to evaluate collections, die because of summarizations kicking in
etc. I immediately suspect disk IO (even though it can be of other reasons
too).

 

/ Johan

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Roland Janus
Sent: den 22 oktober 2013 16:32
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [mssms] SQLIO tests values?

 

Still a couple of questions while the file is created J

 

Where you get the IOPS numbers from?

They may indicate good and bad SAN, but what CM likely needs is just good
enough performance (for either disk layout and I was going with the same
approach idea depending on performance).

So far the only number ever mentioned (afaik) was 5000 IOPS at lasts year
MMS and that is certainly not official and way below what you have.

 

-R

 

 

From: Roland Janus [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Dienstag, 22. Oktober 2013 16:15
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: RE: [mssms] SQLIO tests values?

 

Perfect timing, thanks Johan.

And yes, I've used fsutil L

All over again I guess.

 

-R

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Johan Arwidmark
Sent: Dienstag, 22. Oktober 2013 14:45
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [mssms] SQLIO tests values?

 

Check this post: 


Sizing your ConfigMgr 2012 R2 Primary Site Server

http://www.deploymentresearch.com/Research/tabid/62/EntryId/115/Sizing-your-
ConfigMgr-2012-R2-Primary-Site-Server.aspx

 

/ Johan

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Roland Janus
Sent: den 22 oktober 2013 13:10
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mssms] SQLIO tests values?

 

I'm testing our SAN currently and while I get like ridiculous good numbers
for reading (6 number figures IOPS and 1GB/s) it is a different story for
writing.

 

But I have no idea if those tests are valid J

Anyone having some advice on good parameters to test with?

 

-R

 

 

 

 

 



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