With the access methods available today (either RRDNS or the onboard load balancing) a client can land on any lif regardless of the intended access target. pNFS fixes that, but there's no telling how far away that really is.
We see more traffic on the intercluster network than on the data network, regularly. Granted, we move volumes all the time (being able to load balance and expand capacity at will without 7 mode restraints is fantastic) and as we add nodes that traffic increases, but even without that there is and will be a significant amount of cluster traffic that is due to non-local lif's.
If your need is truly very high performance, cluster mode is not for you, at least not now. For marginally high performance and lower it performs well enough. If you are able/willing to trade some of the features of 7 mode (ok, let's be honest, it's quite a few features still) for the primary benefits of CM, you are unlikely to be disappointed. For the data set we put on CM we can do without those features, for now, but the benefits of the namespace and transparent volume migrations for capacity or load balancing is a major benefit. Enough to outweigh all the features we've yet to see on CM.
Jeff Kennedy Qualcomm, Incorporated QCT Engineering Compute 858-651-6592
-----Original Message----- From: toasters-bounces@teaparty.net [mailto:toasters-bounces@teaparty.net] On Behalf Of Darren Sykes Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2012 12:57 PM To: Angelescu, Silviu Cc: Michael Bergman; Toasters Subject: Re: Cluster mode - Market vs field
I'll back up what has already been said - there's absolutely no guarantee you'll access a local dblade without pnfs.
The other thing to consider is infinite volumes - with no nfs4 support, by nature you'll use the cluster network most of the time.
There's no need for a sim - we're running 8.1p1 in our live environment, and will run 8.1.1RC in dev.
Darren Sent from my iPhone
On 19 Jun 2012, at 18:33, "Angelescu, Silviu" Silviu.Angelescu@netapp.com wrote:
Someone mentioned below "With C-mode there's "local" and "remote" array access". Actually, "remote" access would never happen when LIFs are configured on each node (which is the recommended best practice configuration). The only case when you'd get remote traffic thru the interconnect 10GigE network is when you need to shutdown a node for an upgrade for example, or when you move a volume to a node where you don't have a LIF configured (but you could also move the LIF along with the volume or just create a new LIF on the destination node and that would provide a direct path to the new destination node for the volume; one LIF on each node is the bottom line recommended best practice).
Regarding the "performance impact" of cluster-mode, you may want to check the latest SPC-1 benchmark results with FAS 6240 in cluster-mode: http://www.storageperformance.org/benchmark_results_files/SPC-1/NetApp /A001 15_NetApp_FAS6240-cluster/a00115_NetApp_FAS6240-cluster_SPC-1_executiv e-sum mary.pdf Regarding the new CLI, I really like it. Conceptually, it's similar to Cisco's CLI (contextual commands, contextual help, tab to complete the command or get help). The tab and help features are really great.
I suggest looking up the data about ONTAP 8.1 cluster-mode and try it out. Perhaps, download the cluster-mode vSim first and try it on your laptop. ONTAP 8.1 cluster-mode is not my "grandpa's ONTAP cluster-mode" system anymore. There's a lot of goodness to it now and it's stable and really easy to work with. You could check the Data ONTAP Cluster-Mode Administration course begin taught by NetApp training partners to test drive it further if you wish.
Cheers, Sil Angelescu
On 6/19/12 12:57 PM, "Darren Sykes" Darren.Sykes@csr.com wrote:
I was trying to be diplomatic, seems Michael has lowered the bar on that count :)
I agree with you both. I was very concerned about the latency when accessing remote dblades in our environment since we have lots of very small files where the difference is highlighted. There was supposed to be significant improvements in 8.1 - I should really re-run the tests to prove that.
At the moment we attempt to work around the problem by tracking where volumes live and mounting the nblade local to the dblade. Admittedly, that's not the most elegant solution and there is a lag as volumes move.
I wonder how that latency will impact the performance of infinite volumes in 8.1C and beyond?
We also have Isilons and their infiniband backend proved extremely good in reducing the overhead of access remote nodes. Not that they don't have other performance gotchas.
Darren
-----Original Message----- From: toasters-bounces@teaparty.net [mailto:toasters-bounces@teaparty.net] On Behalf Of Blake Golliher Sent: 19 June 2012 17:43 To: Michael Bergman Cc: Toasters Subject: Re: Cluster mode - Market vs field
In fairness, I used C-Mode at my last place and I can say a few things.
- the new cli isn't has hard to pick up as you might think. I feel
within a 3 weeks or a month I was pretty comfortable with it.
- there is a back way into the old ontap cli (it's not exactly the
same, but close) for some debugging things.
- the latency isn't nearly as bad as you might think. We had Nexus
5k's and many 10g links, and worked pretty smoothly.
- While stability wasn't 100%, the failovers worked as expected and
filesystems never stopped being served. This was 8.0 C-Mode
- Moving data between cfo pairs is slick and awesome. Highly
recommend 64bit aggrs.
All that said, I don't think a C-Mode cluster should be pushed unless 4 nodes are in it, two cfo pairs is what every c-mode cluster should start as. Two nodes doesn't make a heck of a lot of sense. I now live in a sea of Isilon and comparing and contrasting the two platforms is pretty interesting.
Hope that helps,
-Blake
On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 8:40 AM, Michael Bergman michael.bergman@ericsson.com wrote:
Darren Sykes wrote:
While I wouldn't disagree that it's a good product, having run GX, then 8.0C then 8.1C I'd argue that in a 2 node configuration C mode would be less reliable with little benefit over 7 mode at this point in time.
Quite... Functionality wise, C-Mode isn't finished yet either, there's quite some work for NTAP to do still. And it's not stable in the proper sense of the word -- 8.1 7-mode isn't stable yet either.
In fact, I'd probably wager that there will be a minimal performance degradation too.
There is. But it's not minimal, not in any sense of the word. With C-mode there's "local" and "remote" array access (the back-ends below the heads so to speak) and the additional latency induced by the cluster network is big. Really big. In use cases where you need to be down at 1 ms avg internal latency for NFS (with the help of PAM-II etc), for a fair NFSops load point, you can just forget about C-Mode yet. *Maybe* some time in the future, maybe it can be polished until 8.2Px or 8.2.1 is out... We'll see.
Less speed and reliability is a hard sell and that's before you even think about how difficult it'd be to move to C mode without buying more hardware.
Somehow "moving" to C-Mode without deploying a whole new system from scratch is unthinkable from there I stand. But of course it depends on the use case and other details.
I'd argue that at this point at least and for the next 24 months C-mode is pretty much like deploying a completely new (from a different vendor) storage system at your site in your environment, effectively potentiually doubling the complexity to handle for your storage ops ppl. Remember the CLI is completely different as well (for the large group of us who need/want to use that a lot, suppose a no of customers use the Web GUI way of controlling Filers to 100%)
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