Each 7200RPM drive is good for about
100 IOPS. Each 15k RPM SAS can usually handle 200 IOPS. I would not personally try
to run 20-30 VMs from two SATA drives, because it would almost surely lead to
poor performance. But I am basing that statement on the type of IO I typically
see in our environment. Your VMs might use totally different amounts of
disk IO than my VMs do, so you may or may need not to worry about disk
IO. It really depends on the type of tasks each VM is doing. One
idea would be to measure the IOPS and graph it using MRTG. Start with a
few VMs and measure them for a few weeks to get an idea how much total disk IO
is needed prior to moving all of the VMs into production. Once you
actually measure the disk IO for a while, then you can make an informed decision.
-----Original Message-----
From:
xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of kevin
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2010
10:45 AM
To: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Xen-users] Hardware
performance question : Disk RPM speed & XenPerformance
Hello,
I am a relatively new user of Xen virtualization, so
you’ll have to forgive the simplistic nature of my question.
I have a Dell R410 poweredge server (dual quad core
CPUs + 32gb ram). I plan on utilizing this server with Xen.
The ‘dilemma’ I am having is whether or
not to replace the 2x 500gb 7.2K RPM drives that came with the server with
faster 300gb 15K RPM drives. Obviously drives that spin faster in general are a
better thing. I am trying to avoid investing $1,000 more in obtaining these
drives unless I feel it is absolutely necessary.
From Xen documentation, I couldn’t get enough of
an idea of how disk write and the speed of disks might play in a potential
bottleneck scenario when 20-30 VMs are ultimately going to be running on the
box.
Does anyone have any experience or advise to share?
Ultimately I don’t mind spending the extra money to replace the drives
but I would love to hear what your thoughts might be as far as what kind of
actual performance increases I might expect.
Thanks!
Kevin