7.0/6.2, 4GB and AHC
Tony Holmes
tony at crosswinds.net
Wed Jul 18 13:51:14 UTC 2007
I had a very interesting couple of days trying to figure out why 6.2-STABLE
and 7.0-CURRENT, both amd64, were giving me random hangs, panics etc.
My system:
Asus M2NPV-VM
4GB Ram
2 x Adaptec 19160 controllers
14 x 33GB Seagate 10k rpm scsi in a disk shelf (2 channel)
2 x 80GB Seagate SATA (geom mirror, system disks)
I had the system installed with 6.2 and upgraded to 7.0- (for the new nfe
driver for the onboard NIC) and added the Adaptecs and disk. I began to play
with geom to set them up as a RAID 10 system for a database. Same configuration
on FreeBSD, solaris and other systems resulted in blazing fast performance.
Set up the disks, fired up a basic bonnie test and... chug chug and eventual
random panic. Okay, maybe I messed up the geom config since I was tinkering
around. Reboot, wait for sync to finish.... 20 hours later it was done - way
too slow. Checked termination, cables, power, etc. All good.
Fire up bonnie... first iteration showed approx 8MBps write approx 10MBps read
was horrendous. Decided to attempt a fresh reinstall.
Load up 6.2R amd64 cd - panic on startup just after SCSI probe delay. Tried
once more and same thing. Okay, try 7.0 amd64.
Divide by 0 error right after SCSI probe - and that's when the thought struck
me - 4GB ram...
Pulled out 2GB and viola, 7.0 installed easily. Configured the Raid 10 and got
the nice 275MBps read and 150MBps (ballpark) benchmark numbers I was expecting.
I know that amd64 supports 4gb+ (I have 2 others with SATA only that are
running flawlessly).
So I am attempting to determine the cause of the failures.
The adaptecs are 32bit with older bios (2.57 and 3.10). They are in the 2
32bit pci slots of the M2NPV motherboard.
I would have thought FreeBSD would have knocked a memory hole in the 3.5-4gb
range to accomodate the device mappings.
Does anyone have any explanations/pointers (I did search and attempt to RTFM
with not much luck) about this?
--
Tony Holmes
Ph: (416) 993-1219
Founder and Senior Systems Architect
Crosswinds Internet Communications Inc.
More information about the freebsd-current
mailing list