Thursday, November 12, 2009

5.6 Concluding Thoughts










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5.6 Concluding Thoughts





We've discussed most of the major issues surrounding

I/O performance tuning: the basic concepts of disk drives, such as

physical layout, access patterns, and the parameters that govern disk

performance; the interfaces that communicate with those disks;

various types of filesystems; and the tools that monitor the

performance of our disks and I/O subsystems.





In many ways, disks occupy a unique pedestal in the field of computer

architecture; they are the only portion of a system whose operation

relies upon mechanical parameters and moving parts, and they are the

last resort for online information storage. This realm is without the

glamour of microprocessor design, where every cycle counts, and it is

not one of the most fundamental parts of modern computer design, like

memory. Perhaps for these reasons, it is one of the areas most

commonly disregarded by systems administrators when approaching

performance tuning problems.





Disk tuning is like a dark lake in the middle of a forest, filled

with all manner of strange and wonderful things; it

doesn't seem to hold much beauty, and it can even be

a bit foreboding. But there are pearls of great performance worth

just a few feet below the surface of that lake -- seize the chance

to find a few.
















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