Peter Farrow peter@farrows.org wrote:
No, hdparm -t gives you the uncached speed, -T gives you the cached speed:
You're right, I just looked at your numbers incorrectly. I was wondering how you got 62MB out of the Ultra33 interface, but didn't see it was for 3 seconds (doh!).
The disks are set the logical block assignments already, and anaconda, detects the number of cylinders differently
in
the install, which makes mirroring non symmetrical, trust
me
when on channel 1 and 2, I've checked this in great detail,
First off, if you use Anaconda with the master/slave on the primary, and the BIOS is LBA, then the partition table _will_ be created with LBA. After that point, if you move the disk to the secondary channel, it _will_ continue to be LBA -- as Linux will read the geometry from the _disk_, not the BIOS.
Secondly, you can _force_ different geometry by pulling up fdisk and entering "x". Then manually set the "h" (heads) to 255, and the reduced "c" (cylinders) appropriately to match. Hit "r" to return to the main menu and "o" to install a new partition table.
_Everyone_ needs to know how to do this -- especially when XP forces 255/63 in conflict with the BIOS on regular occassions. Ironically, this is no longer LBA48 compliant, and heads can exceed 255 now (don't get me started).
furthermore, simultaneous requests to both drives isn't affecting performance as much as you imagine, here are the results of a simultaneous hdparm test: Timing buffered disk reads: Timing buffered disk reads: 46 MB in 3.08 seconds = 14.93 MB/sec 46 MB in 3.08 seconds = 14.92 MB/sec
First off, that's a 25% drop right there!
As I said, you're not only seeing a 50% drop because of the sharing, but additional overhead that could be up to 80% less. I'm sure if you make a sustained set of transfers, it would really kill it. The resetting of the ATA bus continually is part of the problem -- although you're using the same type of disk/mode, so at least it's not as bad as it could be.
(E.g., putting a PIO CD-ROM on the same channel as a DMA hard drive typically results in far more than an 80% loss with all the reset overhead).
Regardless, 15MBps is about 3-4x _slower_ than modern disks.
Also the old machine had them on the same channel two for the same reason..... This isn't the issue, its something else.......
Oh, why didn't you mention the old config was the same?
-- Bryan
P.S. In a world with cheap, off-chipset Ultra33 cards (sub-$10 at many resellers) for additional channels (such as optical drives), why ever put two hard drives on the same channel?