On Mon, 2019-02-18 at 17:02 +0100, Paul Emmerich wrote:
> > > I've benchmarked a ~15% performance difference in IOPS between cache
> > > expiration time of 0 and 10 when running fio on a single file from a
> > > single client.
> > >
> > >
> >
> > NFS iops? I'd guess more READ ops in particular?
> >
> > I've benchmarked a ~15% performance difference in IOPS between cache
> > expiration time of 0 and 10 when running fio on a single file from a
> > single client.
> >
> >
>
> NFS iops? I'd guess more READ ops in particular? Is that with a
> FSAL_CEPH backend?
Yes. But that take that with a g
On Mon, 2019-02-18 at 16:40 +0100, Paul Emmerich wrote:
> > A call into libcephfs from ganesha to retrieve cached attributes is
> > mostly just in-memory copies within the same process, so any performance
> > overhead there is pretty minimal. If we need to go to the network to get
> > the attribute
>
> A call into libcephfs from ganesha to retrieve cached attributes is
> mostly just in-memory copies within the same process, so any performance
> overhead there is pretty minimal. If we need to go to the network to get
> the attributes, then that was a case where the cache should have been
> inv
On Fri, 2019-02-15 at 15:34 +0800, Marvin Zhang wrote:
> Thanks Jeff.
> If I set Attr_Expiration_Time as zero in conf , deos it mean timeout
> is zero? If so, every client will see the change immediately. Will it
> decrease the performance hardly?
> I seems that GlusterFS FSAL use UPCALL to invali
Thanks Jeff.
If I set Attr_Expiration_Time as zero in conf , deos it mean timeout
is zero? If so, every client will see the change immediately. Will it
decrease the performance hardly?
I seems that GlusterFS FSAL use UPCALL to invalidate the cache. How
about the CephFS FSAL?
On Thu, Feb 14, 2019
On Thu, 2019-02-14 at 20:57 +0800, Marvin Zhang wrote:
> Here is the copy from https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7530#page-40
> Will Client query 'change' attribute every time before reading to know
> if the data has been changed?
>
> +-+++-+-
Here is the copy from https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7530#page-40
Will Client query 'change' attribute every time before reading to know
if the data has been changed?
+-+++-+---+
| Name| ID | Data Type | Acc | Defined in
On Thu, 2019-02-14 at 19:49 +0800, Marvin Zhang wrote:
> Hi Jeff,
> Another question is about Client Caching when disabling delegation.
> I set breakpoint on nfs4_op_read, which is OP_READ process function in
> nfs-ganesha. Then I read a file, I found that it will hit only once on
> the first time,
Hi Jeff,
Another question is about Client Caching when disabling delegation.
I set breakpoint on nfs4_op_read, which is OP_READ process function in
nfs-ganesha. Then I read a file, I found that it will hit only once on
the first time, which means latter reading operation on this file will
not trigg
On Thu, 2019-02-14 at 10:35 +0800, Marvin Zhang wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 14, 2019 at 8:09 AM Jeff Layton wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > > As http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/nfs/ says, it's OK to
> > > config active/passive NFS-Ganesha to use CephFs. My question is if we
> > > can use active/active nfs-g
On Thu, Feb 14, 2019 at 8:09 AM Jeff Layton wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> > As http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/nfs/ says, it's OK to
> > config active/passive NFS-Ganesha to use CephFs. My question is if we
> > can use active/active nfs-ganesha for CephFS.
>
> (Apologies if you get two copies of this
> Hi,
> As http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/nfs/ says, it's OK to
> config active/passive NFS-Ganesha to use CephFs. My question is if we
> can use active/active nfs-ganesha for CephFS.
(Apologies if you get two copies of this. I sent an earlier one from the
wrong account and it got stuck i
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