[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Remus and Kemari...
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 08:40:35AM -0200, Gilberto Nunes wrote: > Em Quinta-feira 21 Janeiro 2010, às 08:16:55, você escreveu: > > Hi Pasi > > > On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 08:12:21AM -0200, Gilberto Nunes wrote: > > > Em Quarta-feira 20 Janeiro 2010, às 22:20:17, Brendan Cully escreveu: > > > > > > Hi Brendan... > > > > > > > On Thursday, 14 January 2010 at 09:52, gilberto nunes wrote: > > > > > I installed the Remus but had some problems. > > > > > He leaves the VM very slow. I'm using a partition with DRBD / LVM. > > > > > May even be that you say that has many layers (DRBD / LVM) that can > > > > > influence on performance. > > > > > But the interesting thing is that when Remus is not running the VM is > > > > > light even with 512M of memory. And look what I'm talking about a > > > > > Windows 2003 Standard Edition. > > > > > The Remus to stop working inexplicably (at least for me) > > > > > and let the VM's started in a state of the two nodes ... > > > > > > > > It's taken me a while to get Xen unstable running again, but now that > > > > I have I can't reproduce any of these problems with an XP guest. It > > > > remains responsive while Remus is running, and doesn't fail over > > > > unless I kill it. > > > > > > Right > > > > > > > Disk access isn't likely to make a huge performance difference > > > > (although I should say, simply parking a Remus VM on top of DRBD is > > > > not safe, since there is no way of rolling back changes that have been > > > > written since the most recent checkpoint). > > > > > > What you suggest... NFS! > > > > > > > It sounds like your network > > > > link between the primary and backup is either low capacity or flaky in > > > > some way, or you have a loaded dom0. > > > > > > My network between primary and backup server is a dedicate network, make > > > with a dedicate fast ethernet switch... > > > > Not sure if Fast Ethernet is enough for Remus syncing? > > Well, I try too with crossover network cable, in Giga Ethernet, but I have > the > same... > > > > > > I do not understand wath you say about that "I have a loaded dom0". On > > > fact, Xen always have a loaded dom0, right! > > > > I bet he meant "do you have high load on dom0", aka do you have high cpu > > usage in dom0? Try running "xm top" to figure out. And also normal "top" > > in dom0. > > Ok... I run xm top and get this: > > NAME > Domain-0 > > STATE > -----r > > CPU(sec) > 135 > > > CPU(%) > 0.6 > So it's not using much CPU. > MEM(k) > 7226368 > > MEM(%) > 86.2 > Did you configure dom0_mem= for Xen? See: http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/XenBestPractices Or is there something in dom0 using all the memory for real? Run "top" in dom0, and sort by memory usage by pressing shift+m. > MAXME(k) > no limit > > MAXMEM(%) > n/a > > VCPUS > 2 > > Something wrong!!! > > >>> I'd recommend using single-processor dom0 and guest to start with, and > > > > pinning the VCPUs to their own separate physical cores. > > > > > > I see. But how I do this!! I am a newbie. If you can point some ways to > > > me, I'll appreciate... > > > > See: > > http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/XenCommonProblems > > > > There's a chapter called "How can I limit the number of vcpus my dom0 has?" > > and "Can I dedicate a cpu core (or cores) only for dom0?" > > I see... However, this procedure do not take alway the beneficity of multi- > core processors to my VM's!!!! > You can still use multiple cores on your VMs. If you don't want to dedicate a core only for dom0, at least configure the domain weights so that dom0 is guaranteed to get enough CPU time. -- Pasi _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |