You might get more responses from the linux-nfs list (cc'd).
--b.
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 01:11:31PM -0400, Michael Shuey wrote:I'm currently toying with Linux's NFS, to see just how fast it can go in a high-latency environment. Right now, I'm simulating
a 100ms delay between client and server with netem (just 100ms
on the outbound packets from the client, rather than 50ms each
way). Oddly enough, I'm running into performance problems. :-)
According to iozone, my server can sustain about 90/85 MB/s (reads/writes) without any latency added. After a pile of tweaks, and injecting 100ms of netem latency, I'm getting 6/40 MB/s (reads/writes). I'd really like to know why writes are now
so much faster than reads, and what sort of things might boost the read throughput. Any suggestions?
1 The read throughput seems to be proportional to the latency - adding only 10ms of delay gives 61 MB/s reads, in limited testing
(need to look at it further). While that's to be expected, to some extent, I'm hoping there's some form of readahead that can help me out here (assume big sequential reads).
iozone is reading/writing a file twice the size of memory on the
client with a 32k block size. I've tried raising this as high
as 16 MB, but I still see around 6 MB/sec reads.
I'm using a 2.6.9 derivative (yes, I'm a RHEL4 fan). Testing with a stock 2.6, client and server, is the next order of business.
NFS mount is tcp, version 3. rsize/wsize are 32k. Both client and server have had tcp_rmem, tcp_wmem, wmem_max, rmem_max, wmem_default, and rmem_default tuned - tuning values are 12500000
for defaults (and minimum window sizes), 25000000 for the maximums. Inefficient, yes, but I'm not concerned with memory efficiency at the moment.
Both client and server kernels have been modified to provide larger-than-normal RPC slot tables. I allow a max of 1024, but I've found that actually enabling more than 490 entries in /proc
causes mount to complain it can't allocate memory and die. That
was somewhat suprising, given I had 122 GB of free memory at the
time...
I've also applied a couple patches to allow the NFS readahead to
be a tunable number of RPC slots. Currently, I set this to 489
on client and server (so it's one less than the max number of
RPC slots). Bandwidth delay product math says 380ish slots
should be enough to keep a gigabit line full, so I suspect
something else is preventing me from seeing the readahead I
expect.
FYI, client and server are connected via gigabit ethernet. There's a couple routers in the way, but they talk at 10gigE and
can route wire speed. Traffic is IPv4, path MTU size is 9000 bytes.
--Is there anything I'm missing?
-- Mike Shuey Purdue University/ITaP