[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] small cluster storage configuration?
GlusterFS also does replication - question is whether it's performance is up to supporting VMs. Mixed responses so far, some suggestions that this is supposed to get a lot better in version 3.3 (currently in beta). Not sure the impact of Red Hat's acquisition of Gluster. I used GlusterFS a couple of years ago for a storage project and it worked very well until we put load on it. There were multiple problems with our implementation though: - It was an older version of Gluster. - I only had two nodes. No striping, just mirroring.- The backend storage was 7200RPM SATA SAN space and thus slow. Both nodes shared the same spindles. - I was stingy on RAM for the storage nodes.- The primary application was a PHP session store that handled in the neighborhood of 600 requests per second. That's a lot of read and write for this sort of system. Keep in mind the FUSE layer... We moved to a single-node of NFS to replace this and even then had to move the underlying storage to an FC zone of the SAN to patch up performance. My understanding of GlusterFS is that it's better designed to handle larger files and this may make it a better candidate for hosting VM's. I'd still be concerned about only having 16 drives but I think it's worth a shot. RAID them all at the host level, hand the (ext4 or better -- I'd skip ext2/3) filesystem to Gluster, then stripe+replicate. Do a whole bunch of testing. Live migration won't be a problem but performance might be. John -- John Madden / Sr UNIX Systems Engineer Office of Technology / Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana Free Software is a matter of liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of Free as in 'free speech,' not as in 'free beer.' -- Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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