Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ncar!husc6!rice!sun-spots-request From: munnari!chook.ua.oz.au!jeremy@uunet.uu.net (Jeremy Webber) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun Subject: Re: Swap Disk for Sun 3/50 Keywords: Hardware Message-ID: Date: 3 May 89 03:09:05 GMT References: <736@metasoft.UUCP> Sender: usenet@rice.edu Organization: Computer Science, Adelaide University, Australia Lines: 48 Approved: Sun-Spots@rice.edu Original-Date: 13 Apr 89 02:31:00 GMT X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 7, Issue 261, message 2 of 16 ames!mailrus!metasoft!alan@uunet.uu.net (Alan Epstein) writes: 4- how good is the performance in doing something like this? Our hardware engineers, who use a CAD package on Sun 3/60's did some performance comparisons of having a Sun shoebox on a 4MB Sun 3/60 vs a diskless 4MB sun 3/60 vs diskless 8MB and 12MB. The shoebox contained the root and swap partitions, but not the binaries for the CAD package. The result was: The diskfull 4MB Sun actually ran slightly SLOWER than the diskless 4MB one The diskless 8MB Sun ran twice as fast as the diskless 4MB one The diskless 12MB Sun ran at the same speed the diskless 8MB Sun. The timing was the real time taken to perform a fixed sequence of tasks using a portion of the CAD package noted for its memory consumption. The network had ample spare capacity. The server machine was a Sun 4/280, which also had spare capacity. Conclusions: Sun shoeboxes aren't as fast as an Ethernet. If you are short of memory, more memory is MUCH better than local disks. It is also much cheaper. Use the money you save on shoebox disks to buy more disk capacity on your server. As a result of the tests, we traded our shoeboxes for more memory. The engineers are happier with performance on their Suns now (before we got frequent complaints of poor respone). If you don't have enough memory, you are wasting staff time. Provisos: The testing was not an exhaustive benchmark. You must have a server with adequate capacity. If you have enough memory, net traffic due to swapping should not be a worry. Of course, net traffic due to other NFS load may still be, but that won't be solved by putting your swap partition on a local disk. Hope this helps, -jeremy -- -- Jeremy Webber ACSnet: jeremy@chook.ua.oz Computer Science Department Internet: jeremy@chook.ua.oz.au University of Adelaide Voicenet: +61 8 228 5763 GPO Box 498, Adelaide 5001 Papernet: +61 8 223 1206 (FAX) Australia