[ Bottom of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents | Index | Library Home |
Legal |
Search ]
Performance Management Guide
Expanding the Configuration
Unfortunately, every performance-tuning effort ultimately does reach a
point of diminishing returns. The question then becomes, "What hardware do
I need, how much of it, and how do I make the best use of it?" That question
is especially tricky with disk-limited workloads because of the large number
of variables. Changes that might improve the performance of a disk-limited
workload include:
- Adding disk drives and spreading the existing data across them. This divides
the I/O load among more accessors.
- Acquiring faster disk drives to supplement or replace existing ones for
high-usage data.
- Adding one or more disk adapters to attach the current and new disk drives.
- Adding RAM to the system and increasing the VMM's minperm and maxperm parameters to improve the in-memory
caching of high-usage data.
For guidance more closely focused on your configuration and workload, you
can use a measurement-driven simulator, such as BEST/1.
[ Top of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents | Index | Library Home |
Legal |
Search ]