Hi,

> On Tue, 10 Mar 2009, henk de wit wrote:
> > Now I wonder if there is any situation in which 
> > sequential IO performance comes into play. E.g. perhaps during a 
> > tablescan on a non-fragmented table, or during a backup or restore?
> 
> Yes, up to a point. That point is when a single CPU can no longer handle 
> the sequential transfer rate. Yes, there are some parallel restore 
> possibilities which will get you further. Generally it only takes a few 
> discs to max out a single CPU though.

I see, but I take it you are only referring to a backup or a restore? It's of 
course unlikely (even highly undesirable) that multiple processes are doing a 
backup, but it doesn't seem unlikely that multiple queries are doing a table 
scan ;)

> Are you sure you're measuring the maximum IOPS, rather than measuring the 
> IOPS capable in a single thread?

I'm pretty sure we're not testing the number of IOPS for a single thread, as 
we're testing with 1, 10 and 40 threads. There is a significant (2x) increase 
in the total number of IOPS when going from 1 to 10 threads, but no increase 
when going from 10 to 40 threads. You can read more details about the setup I 
used and the problems I ran into here: 
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?p=3707365

Henk

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