Don't bother then  :)

 

Thanks Jason

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Jason Sandys
Sent: Montag, 26. Januar 2015 23:14
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [mssms] Splitting up DB's and files for CM for 1500 clients to
volumes

 

I'm certainly not a SQL expert, so others can correct me, but the main point
is being able to read and write data in parallel and thus make that data
available in parallel to the processors. Parallel processing comes from the
processor and splitting tasks among multiple file can thus be beneficial;
however, if those files share the same physical drives, then you've
introduced an IO bottleneck which could make things worse. Not having
multiple files doesn't prevent parallel processing though.

 

Ultimately, for 1,500 though, you won't see any true difference as that is
chump change for ConfigMgr and SQL Server.

 

J

 

From: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Roland Janus
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 10:52 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: RE: [mssms] Splitting up DB's and files for CM for 1500 clients to
volumes

 

I was on the impression that multiple files allows SQL to process in
parallel, so not better because of different volumes but better for
multiprocessing.

Not?

 

I plan to do some IOPS measuring, but in general I would have gone with all
of SQL on one volume for that size.

That was a yes, right? :)

 

Basically:

 

D: ConfigManager and SQL install

E: SQL Data

F: CM content source

G: Content library (F: and G: not for performance reasons, but it seems to
make sense to split that up)

 

-roland

 

 

From: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jason Sandys
Sent: Montag, 26. Januar 2015 14:23
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: RE: [mssms] Splitting up DB's and files for CM for 1500 clients to
volumes

 

No, not for 1,500 different clients. Also, LUNs are meaningless. LUNs are
simply logical separation of disk space and have nothing to do with perf. If
you were going to do this, you would need to ensure that you split the files
onto separate physical disks otherwise the perf gains are negligible.

 

J

 

From: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Roland Janus
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 2:44 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: [mssms] Splitting up DB's and files for CM for 1500 clients to
volumes

 

A single primary would run on Hyper-V guest and also has the WSUS and MDT
DB.

 

Would you bother to split the different parts of the CM DB to different
volumes, if that serves max 1500 clients and if we have a rather good SAN?

Given that we would use different LUNs, but should I bother at all for that
size or wouldn't one volume for the DB be sufficient performance wise?

(I still would split up the DB into several files though)

 

-Roland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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