> It commits your changes to the journal every five seconds. But your data
> is then only in the journal. It still needs to be written into your
files.
> That writeback is controlled by the normal kernel 30-second writeback
> timing. If that writeback isn't keeping up, kjournald needs to
> force the writeback so it can recycle that data's space in the journal.
>
> While that writeback is happening, everything tends to wait on it.
Doesn't bdflush let you control this? I noted in my first post that we'd
played with changing bdflush params as described here:
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-fs8.html?dwzone=linux
And set them to this:
[root@server5 hm]# cat /proc/sys/vm/bdflush
39 500 0 0 60 300 60 0 0
Shouldn't this reduce it to writing every 3 seconds? We tried lowering some
of the values even further based on the description here:
http://www.bb-zone.com/zope/bbzone/docs/slgfg/part2/cha04/sec04
So we altered the first one (nfract) to 10(%) to try and keep the dirty
buffer list small, but that didn't help either. I sort of thought that
age_buffer at 3 seconds would be more likely to activate anyway than 40% of
buffers being dirty?
> It is suspected that ext3 gets the flushtime on those buffers
> wrong as well, so the writeback isn't happening right.
So you're saying that ext3 is somehow breaking the standard kernel writeback
code? Is this something they know about, and/or are addressing?
Rob
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Oct 15 2002 - 22:00:42 EST