Pasi Kärkkäinen, on 02/08/2010 02:58 PM wrote:
On Fri, Feb 05, 2010 at 02:10:32PM +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:
Pasi Kärkkäinen, on 01/28/2010 03:36 PM wrote:
Hello list,

Please check these news items:
http://blog.fosketts.net/2010/01/14/microsoft-intel-push-million-iscsi-iops/
http://communities.intel.com/community/openportit/server/blog/2010/01/19/1000000-iops-with-iscsi--thats-not-a-typo
http://www.infostor.com/index/blogs_new/dave_simpson_storage/blogs/infostor/dave_simpon_storage/post987_37501094375591341.html

"1,030,000 IOPS over a single 10 Gb Ethernet link"

"Specifically, Intel and Microsoft clocked 1,030,000 IOPS (with 512-byte blocks), and more than 2,250MBps with large block sizes (16KB to 256KB) using the Iometer benchmark"

So.. who wants to beat that using Linux + open-iscsi? :)
I personally, don't like such tests and don't trust them at all. They are pure marketing. The only goal of them is to create impression that X (Microsoft and Windows in this case) is a super-puper ahead of the world. I've seen on the Web a good article about usual tricks used by vendors to cheat benchmarks to get good marketing material, but, unfortunately, can't find link on it at the moment.

The problem is that you can't say from such tests if X will also "ahead of the world" on real life usages, because such tests always heavily optimized for particular used benchmarks and such optimizations almost always hurt real life cases. And you hardly find descriptions of those optimizations as well as a scientific description of the tests themself. The results published practically only in marketing documents.

Anyway, as far as I can see Linux supports all the used hardware as well as all advance performance modes of it, so if one repeats this test in the same setup, he/she should get not worse results.

For me personally it was funny to see how MS presents in the WinHEC presentation (http://download.microsoft.com/download/5/E/6/5E66B27B-988B-4F50-AF3A-C2FF1E62180F/COR-T586_WH08.pptx) that they have 1.1GB/s from 4 connections. In the beginning of 2008 I saw a *single* dd pushing data on that rate over a *single* connection from Linux initiator to iSCSI-SCST target using regular Myricom hardware without any special acceleration. I didn't know how proud I must have been for Linux :).


Hehe, congrats :)

Did you ever benchmark/measure what kind of IOPS numbers you can get?

No. I was solving a task to get max linear throughput from a single initiator, target, link and connection with a HDD RAID6 backstorage on the target.

Vlad

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