ZFS prefers iSCSI disks over local ones ?

Ben RUBSON ben.rubson at gmail.com
Tue Oct 3 14:40:21 UTC 2017


Hi,

I start a new thread to avoid confusion in the main one.
(ZFS stalled after some mirror disks were lost)

> On 03 Oct 2017, at 09:39, Steven Hartland wrote:
> 
>> On 03/10/2017 08:31, Ben RUBSON wrote:
>> 
>>> On 03 Oct 2017, at 09:25, Steven Hartland wrote:
>>> 
>>>> On 03/10/2017 07:12, Andriy Gapon wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> On 02/10/2017 21:12, Ben RUBSON wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>> 
>>>>> On a FreeBSD 11 server, the following online/healthy zpool :
>>>>> 
>>>>> home
>>>>>  mirror-0
>>>>>    label/local1
>>>>>    label/local2
>>>>>    label/iscsi1
>>>>>    label/iscsi2
>>>>>  mirror-1
>>>>>    label/local3
>>>>>    label/local4
>>>>>    label/iscsi3
>>>>>    label/iscsi4
>>>>> cache
>>>>>  label/local5
>>>>>  label/local6
>>>>> 
>>>>> A sustained read throughput of 180 MB/s, 45 MB/s on each iscsi disk
>>>>> according to "zpool iostat", nothing on local disks (strange but I
>>>>> noticed that IOs always prefer iscsi disks to local disks).
>>>> 
>>>> Are your local disks SSD or HDD?
>>>> Could it be that iSCSI disks appear to be faster than the local disks
>>>> to the smart ZFS mirror code?
>>>> 
>>>> Steve, what do you think?
>>> 
>>> Yes that quite possible, the mirror balancing uses the queue depth +
>>> rotating bias to determine the load of the disk so if your iSCSI host
>>> is processing well and / or is reporting non-rotating vs rotating for
>>> the local disks it could well be the mirror is preferring reads from
>>> the the less loaded iSCSI devices.
>> 
>> Note that local & iscsi disks are _exactly_ the same HDD (same model number,
>> same SAS adapter...). So iSCSI ones should be a little bit slower due to
>> network latency (even if it's very low in my case).
> 
> The output from gstat -dp on a loaded machine would be interesting to see too.

So here is the gstat -dp :

L(q) ops/s  r/s  kBps ms/r w/s kBps ms/w d/s kBps ms/d %busy Name
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da0
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da1
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da2
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da3
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da4
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da5
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da6
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da7
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da8
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da9
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da10
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da11
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da12
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da13
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da14
   1   370  370 47326  0.7   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0 23.2| da15
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da16
   0   357  357 45698  1.4   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0 39.3| da17
   0   348  348 44572  0.7   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0 22.5| da18
   0   432  432 55339  0.7   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0 27.5| da19
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da20
   0     0    0     0  0.0   0    0  0.0   0    0  0.0  0.0| da21

The 4 active drives are the iSCSI targets of the above quoted pool.

A local disk :

Geom name: da7
Providers:
1. Name: da7
   Mediasize: 4000787030016 (3.6T)
   Sectorsize: 512
   Mode: r0w0e0
   descr: HGSTxxx
   lunid: 5000xxx
   ident: NHGDxxx
   rotationrate: 7200
   fwsectors: 63
   fwheads: 255

A iSCSI disk :

Geom name: da19
Providers:
1. Name: da19
   Mediasize: 3999688294912 (3.6T)
   Sectorsize: 512
   Mode: r1w1e2
   descr: FREEBSD CTLDISK
   lunname: FREEBSD MYDEVID  12
   lunid: FREEBSD MYDEVID  12
   ident: iscsi4
   rotationrate: 0
   fwsectors: 63
   fwheads: 255

Sounds like then the faulty thing is the rotationrate set to 0 ?

Thx,

Ben



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