On 2 Nov 2001, Zlatko Calusic wrote:
> Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> writes:
>
> > Hello Zlatko,
> >
> > I'm not sure how the email thread ended but I noticed different
> > unplugging of the I/O queues in mainline (mainline was a little more
> > overkill than -ac) and also wrong bdflush histeresis (pre-wakekup of
> > bdflush to avoid blocking if the write flood could be sustained by the
> > bandwith of the HD was missing for example).
>
> Thank God, today it is finally solved. Just two days ago, I was pretty
> sure that disk had started dying on me, and i didn't know of any
> solution for that. Today, while I was about to try your patch, I got
> another idea and finally pinpointed the problem.
>
> It was write caching. Somehow disk was running with write cache turned
> off and I was getting abysmal write performance. Then I found hdparm
> -W0 /proc/ide/hd* in /etc/init.d/umountfs which is ran during shutdown
> but I don't understand how it survived through reboots and restarts!
> And why only two of four disks, which I'm dealing with, got confused
> with the command. And finally I don't understand how I could still got
> full speed occassionaly. Weird!
>
> I would advise users of Debian unstable to comment that part, I'm sure
> it's useless on most if not all setups. You might be pleasantly
> surprised with performance gains (write speed doubles).
That's great if you don't mind losing all of your data in a power outage!
What do you think happens if the software thinks data is committed to
permanent storage when in fact it in only in DRAM on the drive?
-jwb
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Nov 07 2001 - 21:00:20 EST