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epower
Quartz | Level 8

Has any one developed as a preference or recommendation on SASWORK for 9.4

Looks like I have Ultra Disk and Premium SSD to choose on these machines.

For Ultra Disk, is there a guidance on determining iops? The MBPS is a bit easier but I'm not sure how we determine that with SAS

 

Thanks!

 

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MargaretC
SAS Employee

Azure L series instances - please make sure you use the Intel ones.  There are possible issues with the AMD ones since SAS heavily uses Intel's math kernel libraries (MKL) for analytics. Sometimes the MKL libraries do not work on AMD, so performance gains from the MKL libraries will not be available on AMD systems.

 

As for Ultra vs Premium drives, we have not seen enough performance gains with Ultra drives to justify the additional price of Ultra drives when compared to Premium drives.

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MargaretC
SAS Employee

Azure L series instances - please make sure you use the Intel ones.  There are possible issues with the AMD ones since SAS heavily uses Intel's math kernel libraries (MKL) for analytics. Sometimes the MKL libraries do not work on AMD, so performance gains from the MKL libraries will not be available on AMD systems.

 

As for Ultra vs Premium drives, we have not seen enough performance gains with Ultra drives to justify the additional price of Ultra drives when compared to Premium drives.

epower
Quartz | Level 8

Looks like we should actually be using the nvme drives that are already on the box. Based on the documentation we should hit some really high speeds.  What options were used by SAS when striping across the 4 nvme drives?  Settings like stripsize and readahead

Morse_Bill
Obsidian | Level 7

Tuning for SASWORK

there are SAS NOTES etc out there on this topic.   I start with striping at the BUFSIZE.

Jikuel
SAS Employee

@epower What OS and version are you running? If RHEL 7 or 8, I would recommend using the rhel_iotest.sh tool (https://support.sas.com/kb/59/680.html) to measure your IO throughput over the standard UNIX version. Rhel_iotest.sh is much easier to run since you only need to pass it the target file system and it handles calculating the rest of the parameters needed.

 

As for the nvme striping (note this also applies to RHEL), we typically recommend using lvm2 to stripe these drives together. A good place to start is with a 64 KB stripesize and a large, static value for readahead (8 MB+). I've found a 16 MB readahead is a good fit for my workload, but you can always monitor and adjust these values down the road if needed. When using lvm2, it's also important to make sure the drives ultimately get striped and not concatenated.

 

Let me know if you have any questions or would like some help putting together commands for setting up/striping the nvme drives.

 

You can find our RHEL OS tuning best practices here:

RHEL 6 & 7: https://access.redhat.com/sites/default/files/attachments/optimizingsasonrhel6and7_2.pdf

RHEL 8: https://communities.sas.com/t5/Administration-and-Deployment/Interim-RHEL-8-Tuning-Guidelines-for-SA...

epower
Quartz | Level 8

Thanks for the recommendations!  We're on RHEL 8 so I will definitely be using that tool along with some benchmark programs I have written in SAS itself as well. 

Jikuel
SAS Employee

Happy to help! The current external version of rhel_iotest.sh only supports RHEL 6 & 7 (we're working on getting RHEL 8 support pushed). If you want to shoot me an email at Jim.Kuell@sas.com, I'd be happy to send you over a temporary version that will work with RHEL 8.

 

EDIT: It looks like the RHEL 8 update has been pushed to the external version after all. I'll see if I can get the doc updated to properly reflect that.

SASKiwi
PROC Star

SAS provides a tool for testing IO: 51660 - Tool to test I/O throughput on UNIX platforms (sas.com)

 

A minimum throughput of 100mps per core is recommended.

epower
Quartz | Level 8
Thanks! We’re aiming for 150
epower
Quartz | Level 8

Hi Everyone,

Just wanted to follow up (not sure what I was thinking about considering premium or ultra on the L series machine)... Anyways, we tested out the L32v3series using the NVME for work and this is what we got using the iotest script. I would say this is a huge success. Pushing  7GB/sec on the L32 right out of the box on SASWORK.   

 

epower_0-1666125823144.png

 

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