Tape backup performance on 386 ISA/EISA systems
Ron Kuris
ron at rdk386.uucp
Mon Jun 4 07:53:05 AEST 1990
In article <1990May30.132457.6117 at virtech.uucp> cpcahil at virtech.UUCP (Conor P. Cahill) writes:
>In article <1990May26..841 at rdk386.uucp> ron at rdk386.UUCP (Ron Kuris) writes:
>>In article <1990May25.123302.26061 at virtech.uucp> cpcahil at virtech.uucp (Conor P. Cahill) writes:
>>> [ stuff deleted ]
>>Seems to me like you're not taking into account filesystem fragmentation
>>or a bunch of other factors. How about running a disk optimizer (e.g.
>>shuffle) before you start the test? I've noticed a dramatic increase due
>>to less head activity (I don't have numbers handy).
>
>For several reasons:
>
>1. There are no commercial disk optimzers for UNIX (at least that I know of)
>and most people, myself included, cringe at the thought of letting someone's
>program hunt around my raw disk patching things together. I'm not saying
>that the programs are bad. I'm just saying that it will take a lot more
>than a simple post to alt.sources to get me to run one of those programs
>on my production systems. Anyway, I can't ask people to run one when they
>may not even have it.
You don't have to run one -- how about a backup then a mkfs, then a restore,
then the REAL backup?
>2. The performance of the disk due to optimizations will probably have
>little performance effect on the overall perforance on the tape write, since
>the tape write is the limiting factor.
I get double the performance on an optimized backup as compared to an
unoptimized backup. Reason: My tape streams when everything is optimal,
and does NOT when it is not optimal. I know this because originally my
disks were not backed up and restored at all. When I finally did this,
my backup time was halved!
--
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