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  • How did Random I/Os Outperform Sequential I/Os?

    Recently, when I was doing some I/O performance tests on an I/O path, I found that 8K random reads (and writes) significantly and consistently outperformed 8K sequential reads (and writes) in terms of I/O throughput (megabytes per second). I was puzzled. With a traditional hard disk that is made up of a stack of magnetic platters held by a ...
    Posted to Linchi Shea (Weblog) by Linchi Shea on April 4, 2007
  • Should I Use a Windows Striped Volume?

    In Windows Server 2003, you can use the Disk Management console to create a striped volume over multiple dynamic disks (well, you can also create a mirrored, a RAID-5 volume, etc). If these disks (or LUNs) are presented from a SAN, most likely you can stripe across the same storage devices--making up these LUNs--inside the SAN to present ...
    Posted to Linchi Shea (Weblog) by Linchi Shea on March 12, 2007
  • Beware of Shifting SAN

    Let’s say you are trying to determine the performance impact of a neat database design change you have just devised on an application. So you run some tests with the existing design and the tests run for several hours. Coming back the next day, you make the change and re-run the same tests. The test results look fantastic. Now, before you ...
    Posted to Linchi Shea (Weblog) by Linchi Shea on January 3, 2007
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