The data is oracle database files and archive logs, and they compress
real well.  The largest single database is about 4TB.
 
-devon

________________________________

From: Hall, Christian N. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 12:22 PM
To: Peters, Devon C; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
VERITAS-BU@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: RE: [Veritas-bu] Some info on my experiences with 10GbE



Devon, 

 

What is your data type your backing up? How much data? 

 

Thanks,

Chris Hall 

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Peters,
Devon C
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 3:10 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; VERITAS-BU@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Some info on my experiences with 10GbE

 

We've been pretty happy with the T2000's.

 

The tape library is an IBM 3584, the tape drives are IBM's 4Gb FC LTO-3
drives, there's a dedicated 4Gb HBA for each drive, and everything is
connected to 4Gb McData switches.

 

We used to have IBM's 2Gb FC LTO-3 drives, and with those the peak
performance was around 165MB/s per drive.  These 4Gb drives peak at
around 265MB/s per drive, though with all 3 tape drives active, we see
throughput closer to 220MB/s per drive...I'm guessing we're bottlenecked
by the ports on our disk subsystem at the moment, but since performance
is more than acceptable we're not looking to tune this any further - at
least not until our LTO-4 drives are installed next month ;).

 

-devon

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 6:10 AM
To: Peters, Devon C; VERITAS-BU@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu] Some info on my experiences with 10GbE


Devon, 

Good to hear that T2000's are screamers. 

What are the library/tape drive specs. Are the drives FC attached? or
are they attached via scsi to the media server? 

Thanks, 
Karl 

> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:veritas-bu-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Peters, Devon C
> Sent: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 12:12 PM
> To: VERITAS-BU@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
> Subject: [Veritas-bu] Some info on my experiences with 10GbE 
>   
> Since I've seen a little bit of talk about 10GbE on here in the past
> I figured I'd share some of my experiences... 
> I've recently been testing some of Sun's dual-port 10GbE NICs on 
> some small T2000's (1Ghz, 4-core).  I'm only using a single port on 
> each card, and the servers are currently directly connected to each 
> other (waiting for my network team to get switches and fibre in
place). 
> So far, I've been able to drive throughput between these two systems
> to about 7500Mbit/sec using iperf.  When the throughput gets this 
> high, all the cores/threads on the receiving T2000 become saturated 
> and TCP retransmits start climbing, but both systems remain quite 
> responsive.  Since these are only 4-core T2000's, I would guess that
> the 6 or 8-core T2000's (especially with 1.2Ghz or 1.4Ghz 
> processors) should be capable of more throughput, possibly near line
speed. 
> The down side achieving this high of throughput is that it requires 
> lots of data streams.  When transmitting with a single data stream, 
> the most throughput I've gotten is about 1500Mbit/sec.  I only got 
> up to 7500Mbit/s when using 64 data streams...  Also, the biggest 
> gains seem to be in the jump from 1 to 8 data streams;  with 8 
> streams I was able to get throughput up to 6500Mbit/sec. 
> Our goal for 10GbE, is to be able to restore data from tape at a 
> speed of at least 2400Mbit/sec (300MB/sec).  We have large daily 
> backups (3-4TB) that we would like to be able to restore (not 
> backup) in a reasonable amount of time.  These restores are used to 
> refresh our test and development environments with current data.  
> The actual backups are done with array based snapshots (HDS 
> ShadowCopy), which then get mounted and backed up by a dedicated 
> media server (6-core T2000).  We're currently getting about 
> 650MB/sec of throughput with the backups (9 streams on 3 LTO3 tape 
> drives - MPX=3 and it's very compressible data). 
> Going off my iperf results, the restoring this data using 9 streams 
> should get us well over 2400Mbit/sec.  But - we haven't installed 
> the cards on our media servers yet, so I have yet to see what the 
> actual performanee of netbackup and LTO3 over 10GbE is.  I'm hopeful
> it'll be close to the iperf results, but if it doesn't meet the goal
> then we'll be looking at other options. 
> -- 
> Devon Peters _______________________________________________
> Veritas-bu maillist  -  Veritas-bu@mailman.eng.auburn.edu
> http://mailman.eng.auburn.edu/mailman/listinfo/veritas-bu

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