[CentOS] md raid1 - no speed improvement

Kieran Clancy

clancy.kieran+centos at gmail.com
Sun Mar 23 11:11:41 UTC 2008


Hi,

I have two 320 GB SATA disks (/dev/sda, /dev/sdb) in a server running
CentOS release 5.

They both have three partitions setup as RAID1 using md (boot, swap,
and an LVM data partition).

# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md0 : active raid1 sdb1[1] sda1[0]
      104320 blocks [2/2] [UU]

md1 : active raid1 sdb2[1] sda2[0]
      4192896 blocks [2/2] [UU]

md2 : active raid1 sdb3[1] sda3[0]
      308271168 blocks [2/2] [UU]

When I do tests though, I find that the md raid1 read performance is
no better than either of the two disks on their own

# hdparm -tT /dev/sda3 /dev/sdb3 /dev/md2

/dev/sda3:
 Timing cached reads:   4160 MB in  2.00 seconds = 2080.92 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  234 MB in  3.02 seconds =  77.37 MB/sec

/dev/sdb3:
 Timing cached reads:   4148 MB in  2.00 seconds = 2074.01 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  236 MB in  3.01 seconds =  78.46 MB/sec

/dev/md2:
 Timing cached reads:   4128 MB in  2.00 seconds = 2064.04 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  230 MB in  3.02 seconds =  76.17 MB/sec

If I fail and remove one of the disks in /dev/md2:
# mdadm /dev/md2 -f /dev/sda3
# mdadm /dev/md2 -r /dev/sda3
# cat /proc/mdstat
...
md2 : active raid1 sdb3[1]
      308271168 blocks [2/1] [_U]

# hdparm -tT /dev/md2

/dev/md2:
 Timing cached reads:   4184 MB in  2.00 seconds = 2092.65 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  240 MB in  3.01 seconds =  79.70 MB/sec

So with only one disk in the array the performance is pretty much the same.

At first I thought maybe the bottleneck is the SATA controller, but if
I do simultaneous reads from both disks:
# mkfifo /tmp/sync
# cat /tmp/sync; hdparm -tT /dev/sda3
(and in another terminal, to make sure they start simultaneously)
# > /tmp/sync; hdparm -tT /dev/sdb3

/dev/sda3:
 Timing cached reads:   2248 MB in  2.00 seconds = 1123.83 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  234 MB in  3.00 seconds =  77.91 MB/sec

/dev/sdb3:
 Timing cached reads:   2248 MB in  2.00 seconds = 1123.74 MB/sec
 Timing buffered disk reads:  236 MB in  3.01 seconds =  78.30 MB/sec

So the total cached read bandwidth seems limited to about 2250 MB/s,
which is slightly higher than the cache read bandwidth for /dev/md2,
but I'm not too worried about that. More concerning is that I am still
getting ~80MB/s from each disk simultaneously on the buffered reads.
Given this I would expect /dev/md2 to give buffered read speeds of at
least 120MB/s (if not 150MB/s).

What can I do to track down this issue? Any help would be really appreciated.

Thanks,
Kieran Clancy.



More information about the CentOS mailing list