What's /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern set to for you? For me it is
% cat /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
core
which will drop a core file in the working directory of the process.
On 19/01/2018 12.56, Frank Wall wrote:
> Is there something I could do to trigger the creation of core files?
_
On 24/10/17 13:01, Alessandro Briosi wrote:
> I would set up a VPN (tinc could work well).
I, too, would recommend to try tinc for this, it can automatically route
traffic of nodes that don't have direct access to other nodes via those
nodes that do.
I have a publicly available setup of Gluster o
Note, I have now put out a patch for bup that makes it 50x faster on my
1M files on gluster, exploiting the fact that stat() is fast after
getdents() on it:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/bup-list/6CM7Jr7b_Ek
I'd still be interested in answers to this question though:
> What caching c
On 18/09/17 17:23, Ben Turner wrote:
> Do you want tuned or untuned? If tuned I'd like to try one of my tunings for
> metadata, but I will use yours if you want.
(Re-CC'd list)
I would be interested in both, if possible: To confirm that it's not
only my machines that exhibit this behaviour give
On 18/09/17 16:51, Ben Turner wrote:
> I wouldn't mind, but I don't have your dataset.
Oh sorry, I thought I had posted that here but in fact I did so in a
different issue regarding getdents() performance (bug 1478411).
My benchmarking data set is trivial: 100k empty files.
In a directory on you
Hi Ben,
do you know if the smallfile benchmark also does interleaved getdents()
and lstat, which is what I found as being the key difference that
creates the performance gap (further down this thread)?
Also, wouldn't `--threads 8` change the performance numbers by factor 8
versus the plain `ls` a
I found the reason now, at least for this set of lstat()s I was looking at.
bup first does all getdents(), obtaining all file names in the
directory, and then stat()s them.
Apparently this destroys some of gluster's caching, making stat()s ~100x
slower.
What caching could this be, and how could
On 17/09/17 18:03, Niklas Hambüchen wrote:
> So far the only difference between `ls` and `bup index` I could observe
> is that `bup index` chdir()s into the directory to index, ls doesn't.
>
> But when I `cd` into the dir and run `ls` without directory argument, it
> is still
On 15/09/17 03:46, Niklas Hambüchen wrote:
>> Out of interest have you tried testing performance
>> with performance.stat-prefetch enabled?
I have now tested with `performance.stat-prefetch: on` but am not
observing a difference.
So far the only difference between `ls` and `bup in
On 15/09/17 02:45, Sam McLeod wrote:
> Out of interest have you tried testing performance
> with performance.stat-prefetch enabled?
Not yet, because I'm still struggling to understand the current more
basic setup's performance behaviour (with it being off), but it's
definitely on my list and I'll
Hi,
I have a gluster 3.10 volume with a dir with ~1 million small files in
them, say mounted at /mnt/dir with FUSE, and I'm observing something weird:
When I list and stat them all using rsync, then the lstat() calls that
rsync does are incredibly fast (23 microseconds per call on average,
defini
I also found that the Ubuntu PPAs maintained by the gluster team, when
unpacked, contain a patch in the debian/patches directory that addresses
these issues (but of course it'd be better to have it fixed upstream).
On 22/02/17 18:42, Shyam wrote:
> Optionally try patching the sources with this com
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