On Apr 9, 2010, at 9:59 AM, Bernhard Gschaider <bgschaid_lists@ice- sf.at> wrote:
Hi!
During the last weeks I experienced some performance problems with a large file-system on XFS basis. Sometimes for instance ls is painfully. Immidiatly afterwards ls on the same directory is immidiate. I used strace on this ls and found that during the first ls the lstat-calls need approx 0.02s each while during the second ls the are two orders of magnitude faster.
Googling around I stumbled upon some messages similar like this
http://www.opensubscriber.com/message/linux-xfs@oss.sgi.com/1355060.html
which have in common a) they're from around 2006 b) they suggest to increase a mount-option ihashsize. This mount option is listed as deprecated in the current kernel-doc
So my question: does anyone have experience with that kind of performance problem? Do you think it is a XFS problem or are there some other tuning parameters in the kernel that could be modified for instance via /proc?
The reason why I'm asking here is that it is a production file-system so I would be very unpopular if I experiment too much (a couple of reboots is OK ;) )
Bernhard
PS: the situation got worse during the last weeks when the file-system increased in size, so the option that some kind of buffer now is too small and I'm experiencing some kind of thrashing seems very likely to me
Are you defragging the file system regularly?
How much memory do you have in the system and how big is the file system?
What are the XFS parameters for the file system?
What is the storage setup?
Need the info.
-Ross