Hi Roberto,
What is the cpu and memory configuration of your guest? Are you
pinning to dedicated CPUs, are you exposing host topology and cpu
features, do you have dedicated I/O threads? Are you backing the guest
memory with hugepages? All of the above will likely increase
performance and minimise noise.
Cheers,
On 6 December 2016 at 05:13, Roberto Fichera <kernel(a)tekno-soft.it> wrote:
Hi There,
I've moved some Windows2012 with MSSQL VMs from an hold ESXi 5.5 machine
to a more recent and powerful machine running Fedora 24 x86_64 and related libvirt + KVM
virtualization. I've moved the VMs filesystem to LVM slices and installed the VirtIO
drivers
in to all Windows VMs. I've also set both Disk and Network interface to work using
VirtIO.
So far so good everything works pretty fine. Now I would like to tune at best the MSSQL
VM
for both Disk and Network interfaces in order to get the best performance possible.
Regarding network interface I've set it to work as bridge instead to go through to
macvtap, so I'm
not sure what is the best in this case.
Regarding disk, since it's LVM I've chosen to go to cache mode none and IO mode
native. Also
here cannot judge what's the best setup for the workload. I'm undecided to use IO
mode threads
along directsync cache mode.
Finally I've set "ionice -c 1 -p <qemu-pid> -n 0" and "renice -n
-10 <qemu-pid>" for the interested
VM that I want to get best performance possible.
Even with the above setup, the MSSQL VM has performance similar to the old machine
running
ESXi 5.5, so does anyone can suggest where too look at and/or what would be the right
setup?
Thanks in advance.
Roberto Fichera
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Cheers,
~Blairo