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Date:      Mon, 5 Mar 2001 17:02:15 -0800 (PST)
From:      Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com>
To:        Dan Phoenix <dphoenix@bravenet.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: systat -vmstat or iostat IO help
Message-ID:  <200103060102.f2612FH47843@earth.backplane.com>
References:   <Pine.BSO.4.21.0103051634080.6833-100000@gandalf.bravenet.com>

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:
:
:
:this is a webserver ......i am trying to figure out if cpu increase or
:scsi drives is better in this situation. Right now...that is a big
:decision because there are approx 30 fbsd webservers ....not all showing
:high IO from vmstat...just the ones with the highest uptime.
:...

    Check the memory load with 'systat -vm 1'... if you are swapping a
    lot simply adding more memory may solve the problem.  Generally speaking,
    adding more memory to a web server helps a lot even if you aren't
    swapping because web servers tend to be heavy on reading files.  

    Today's machines are powerful enough that you can serve thousands of
    users off a single host, but drive technology isn't powerful enough to
    serve large datasets off a single drive so you need a lot of ram for
    cache.  For example, a 20G hard drive may be able to store 20G worth
    of files, but it sure won't be able to keep up with a heavily loaded
    webserver unless you have a lot of ram for caching.  Drive seek times
    tend to top out at 6ms, or 166 seeks per second, and without sufficient
    memory to cache the web pages this will result in severe limitations
    to the number of hits/sec the webserver can handle.

						-Matt


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