ONTAP Discussions

RMAN I/O: Read from Oracle backup image for restoration and write for backup

netappmagic
10,949 Views

We have a process of using RMAN to restore a DB to a VM server by reading a backup image stored on a NFS share, then after the successful restoration, back the DB up to the same NFS share.

 

During the restoration, both latency and IOPS on this NFS share were very high, 25 ms/op and 1400 IOPS. During the backup, the latency was only about 1-2 ms/op, and about the same IOPS. Throughputs are about the same in both case as well.

 

I thought the RMAN read and write both is sequential I/O, I cannot explain why the read would cause such high latency.

 

Can somebody please explain to me? 

Thank you!

16 REPLIES 16

paul_stejskal
10,853 Views

Model of filer?

 

Not many details here, but high latency for Oracle isn't a problem by itself. Did this actually cause an impact?

 

Need more info to better answer.

netappmagic
10,832 Views

It is actually CVO in Azure, in a 10x1TB HDD aggregate. 

Yes, there is bad performance impact. 

 

I didn't mention these details because my question was just simply about read(restoration) and write(backup) on the same environment/aggregate/filer(cvo), why was there  very high latency for reading, but very low latency for writing and how to explain this?

paul_stejskal
10,831 Views

My guess? HDD aggregates.

steiner
10,718 Views

Ah, that explains a lot. The IOPS limits on the underlying disks for CVO are based on bandwidth, not actual IO operations. It's fairly easy to size CVO for the day-to-day needs of an Oracle database, but when it's time for backups, you can easily overwhelm those disks. It's not a CVO limitation, the same thing happens with databases directly on Azure or AWS drives. 5000 IOPS with an 8K block size might be plenty for normal database operations, but an RMAN operation can consume all 5K IOPS and starve the database. 

 

The best option is really to stop moving backup data around and rely on snapshots for in-place backup and restore instead. If that's not an option, you might be stuck increasing the IOPS capabilities of the backend disks to handle the streaming backup workloads.

paul_stejskal
10,720 Views

Also, AWS and Azure (not sure about Google) have burst credits. When those expire, that hurts as it's like being double degraded in a regular FAS HDD array in terms of performance. You have to stop i/o on the aggregate so it can refill the credits.

 

It is best to have a minimum size (in AWS it's like 5 or 6 TB, don't remember Azure). It's very similar to AWS so this KB is mostly applicable: https://kb.netapp.com/Advice_and_Troubleshooting/Cloud_Services/Cloud_Volumes_ONTAP_(CVO)/What_are_some_considerations_of_Cloud_Volumes_ONTAP_AWS_Perf...

 

We need one for Azure, but the concepts are the same.

netappmagic
10,659 Views

What is your recommendation on tools using SnapShot to backup or restore Oracle Database? Will that be SnapCenter for Oracle?

 

Also, What is your recommendation on increasing the IOPS capabilities of the backend disks? Upgrading HDD to SDD is expensive.

 

Again, my question was why there was so high latency when RMAN was doing restore/read, but so low latency when doing backup/write under the same aggregate and cvo?

 

Thanks for your inputs

paul_stejskal
10,657 Views

1) Yes SnapCenter or any product that supports SnapDiff APIs and Oracle.

2) Getting an aggregate with drives big enough that burst credits are not a thing and enough disks to do so.

3) Writes are cached in RAM and NVLOG written to a temporary disk, so latency is usually less for writes than reading from spinning media. However, we are given a symptom with no data to review, so it is hard to say. If you really want a deeper dig, and it's not past 28 days I'd open a perf case and we can see if my theory is correct.

netappmagic
10,589 Views

3) Good to know about your comments. That should explain why I have high latency in restore/read, or low in backup/write.

I would like to add: to improve read performance, one can choose an instance type that supports NVMe which CVO uses as Flash Cache

 

Also, in Azure, in the case of Premium storage type, larger size of disks will result in better performance (IOPs), but no so in Standard storage type.   

 

About burst credits, is there any way to track / monitor burst credits in CVO?

steiner
10,559 Views

I've seen synthetic IO tests with FlashCache on CVO, and the results are amazing, as they should be. FlashCache was a miracle for database workloads when if first came out (I was in NetApp PS at the time) because it brought down the average latency of HDD's. It works the same with CVO. The backend drives for AWS and Azure native storage are flash, but it's still a shared resource and it's not nearly as fast as an actual on-premises all-flash array. FlashCache on that block of NVMe storage on the CVO instance works the same - it brings down the average latency.

 

I don't think there's a way to monitor the burst credits, but they publish the math of how it's calculated. You'll exhaust the burst credits pretty quickly with backups, so it's probably not going to help with that scenario. I did some tests a few years back where the burst credits were really confusing my results until I figured out what was happening. 

 

With respect to snapshots, check out TR-4591 which includes some material on how to use plain snapshots right on ONTAP itself. SnapCenter is often best option, but not always. What you want is a snapshot. There are multiple ways to get it.

netappmagic
10,556 Views

FlashCache is helpful for Databasee workload or random read, as you pointed out. But, after I sent out previous message, I am thinking it might be not helpful for RMAN backup or restore because they are sequential read/write. Right?

 

It is interesting to know that NetApp native snapshots can be used for Oracle backup. My understanding was different. I will be looking into that TR document you are referring to. Thanks 

steiner
10,553 Views

FlashCache actually might still help with the backup situation.

 

The basic problem here is the QoS limit that the cloud providers placed on their storage. They call it IOPS, but it's not, it's bandwidth. We've seen a lot of customers run into this exact problem. 

 

Let's say you had an ancient HDD array. You could do backups AND the usual database random IO pretty easily because those large-block backup IO's are easy for a storage array to process. They're nice big IO's, and the array can do readahead. When we used to size for HDD database storage, we'd always focus on the random IOPS because that controlled the number of drives that goes into the solution. The sequential IO, like backups and many reporting operations, was almost free. You pay for random IO, and we throw in the sequential IO for at no cost. If you looked at the numbers, a typical HDD array might be able to provide 250MB/sec of random IOPS, but could easily do 2.5GB/sec of large-block sequential IOPS.

 

Public cloud storage doesn't give you that "free" sequential IO. They have strict bandwidth controls,  and the result is that customers are often surprised that everything about their database works just fine with the exception of the backup or maybe that one late-night report that included a full table scan. The day-to-day random IOPS fit within the capabilities of the backend storage, but the sequential IO work slams into the limits relatively easily. 

 

FlashCache ought to ease the pressure there because the IOPS serviced by the FlashCache layer won't touch the backend disks. I'd recommend limiting the number of RMAN channels too, because some IO will still need to reach those backend disks.

netappmagic
10,413 Views

Thanks for your time and messages.

 

I can understand that cloud providers would put QoS on my disks, because essentially they are all shared by other customers.

What I missed is, why you would not call IOPS but bandwidth? Would they provide IOPS for IO access as well?

 

If they have strict bandwidth controls, then why they are good for DB workload, not for DB backups?

 

steiner
10,404 Views

IOPS should refer to individual IO operations. A typical ERP database might reach 10K IOPS during random IO operations. That means 10,000 discrete, individual 8K block operations per second. If you do the math, that's also about 80MB/sec. 

 

When the database does a full table scan or an RMAN backup, the IO's are normally in 1MB chunks. That may get broken down by the OS, but it's trying to do 1MB IO's.  That means only 80 IOPS will consume 80MB/sec of bandwidth.

 

The end result is a true IOPS-based QoS control will throttle IO at a much lower total bandwidth than sequential IO. That's normally okay, because storage arrays have an easier time with large-block IO. It's okay to allow a host to consume lots of bandwidth. 

 

It's easy to make a sizing error with databases when QoS is involved. It happens on-premises too. A storage admin won't realize that during the day they need 10K IOPS at an 8K IO size  (80MB/sec) but at night they need 800IOPS at a 1MB size (800MB/sec). If you have a pure bandwidth QoS limit, like 100MB/sec, you'll be safely under the limit most of the time when the database is doing normal random IO tasks, but sometimes those late-night reports and RMAN backups slam into that 100MB/sec limit.

 

That's why you really, really need snapshots with a database in the public cloud. It's the only way to avoid bulk data movement. If you have to size for RMAN bulk data transfers, you end up with storage that is 10X more powerful and expensive than you need outside of the backup window.

 

One neat thing one of our customers did to fix the Oracle full table scan problem in the public cloud was Oracle In-Memory. They spent more for the In-Memory licenses, and they spent more for the RAM in the VM, but the result was dramatically less load on the storage system. That saved money, but more importantly, they were able to meet their performance targets in the public cloud. It's a perfectly obvious use case for In-Memory, it was just nice to see proof that it worked as predicted.

dkrenik
10,402 Views

Apropos that you mention the In-Memory option to the database.  Oracle just had an "In-Memory Database Summit" earlier this week:

https://asktom.oracle.com/pls/apex/f?p=100:551::::551:P551_CLASS_ID:13621 

Tastes like chicken

netappmagic
10,364 Views

The detailed analysis and information sounds very helpful. 

 

With all being said, Are you saying that QoS that usually put by public clouds on customer's storage is really on bandwidth not IOPS?

Sorry, I am slow man. 

steiner
10,080 Views

You're correct. They've normalized a bandwidth limit.

 

If you read carefully, you'll see statements like a volume offers "100 IOPS per GB (8K IO size)" which really means 800KB/GB and then they divided by 8K to get 100 IOPS. They could have described it as 200 IOPS per GB (4K IO size) if they wanted to. It's the same thing.

 

Normally this is all pretty unimportant, but with databases you have a mix of IO types. The random IO's are a lot more work to process, so it's nice to be able to limit actual IOPS. In addition, a small number of huge-block sequential IO's can consume a lot of bandwidth, so it's nice to be able to limit bandwidth independently.

 

There's some more material on this at this link https://tv.netapp.com/detail/video/6211770613001/a-guide-to-databasing-in-the-aws-cloud?autoStart=true&page=4&q=oracle starting at about the 2:45 mark.

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