[yocto] Server specs for a continuous integration system

Chris Tapp opensource at keylevel.com
Tue Sep 3 12:27:49 PDT 2013


On 3 Sep 2013, at 02:04, Elvis Dowson wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> On Sep 3, 2013, at 3:29 AM, Christian Gagneraud <chgans at gna.org> wrote:
> 
>>> Isn't RAID-5 going to be slower, especially if it's software? RAID 1
>>> is probably better as you'll potentially double the write speed to disk.
>>> I use a couple of Vertex SSDs in RAID 1 giving a theoretical write speed
>>> near to 1GBs. Write endurance is possibly a concern, but I've not had
>>> any issues using them on a local build machine. I would probably look at
>>> some higher end models if I was going to run a lot of builds. A lot less
>>> noise than hard drives ;-)
>> 
>> Thanks for the info, i will have a look at RAID-1, as you can see, I know absolutely nothing about RAID! ;)
>> 
>> Does SSD really help with disk throughput? Then what's the point of using ramdisk for TMPDIR/WORKDIR? If you "fully" work in RAM, the disk bottleneck shouldn't be such a problem anymore (basically, on disk, you should only have your yocto source tree and your download directory?).
> 
> I use a Gigabyte Z77X-UP5TH motherboard 
> 
> http://www.gigabyte.us/press-center/news-page.aspx?nid=1166
> 
> which has support for RAID in BIOS, at boot up, and Thunderbolt connected to an Apple 27" Thunderbolt display. I've got two SSDs in a RAID1 configuration (striped).
> 
> If you can wait for some more time, they'll be releasing a version of the motherboard for the new haswell chips as well, but it's not probably going to increase performance. 
> 
> I use a 3770K i7 quad-core processor, 16GB RAM, with a liquid cooled solution running at 3.8GHz. I've overclocked the CPU to 4.5GHz, but I end up shaving only 2 minutes off build times, so I just run it at 3.8GHz.
> 
> A core-image-minimal build takes around 22 minutes for me, for a Xilinx ZC702 machine configuration (Dual ARM Cortex A9 processor + FPGA).

That's basically the spec I run (water cooling also keeps the noise down!). I generally get build times of just over 50 minutes for my system which has 'X' / GLES / Boost with something like 5500 tasks. Much better than the 10+ hours on a VM on the 4 year old MacBook Pro!

> 
> Here are the modifications that I've done to my system, to tweak SSD performance, for Ubuntu-12.10, for a RAID1 array.
> 
> SSD performance tweaks (for non RAID0 arrays)
> 
> Step 01.01: Modify /etc/fstab.
> 
> $ sudo gedit /etc/fstab
> 
> Increase the life of the SSD by reducing how much the OS writes to the disk. If you don't need to knowwhen each file or directory was last accessed, add the following two options to the /etc/fstab file:
> 
> noatime, nodiratime
> 
> To enable TRIM support to help manage disk performance over the long term, add the following option to the /etc/fstab file:
> 
> discard
> 
> The /etc/fstab file should look like this:
> 
> # / was on /dev/sda1 during installation
> UUID=xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx /               ext4    discard,noatime,nodiratime,errors=remount-ro 0       1
> 
> Move /tmp to RAM
> 
> # Move /tmp to RAM
> none            /tmp            tmpfs       defaults,noatime,nodiratime,noexec,nodev,nosuid 0      0
> 
> See: Guide software RAID/LVM TRIM support on Linux for more details.
> 
> Step 01.02: Move the browser's cache to a tmpfs in RAM
> 
> Launch firefox and type the following in the location bar:
> 
> about:config
> 
> Right click and enter a new preference configution by selecting the New->String option.
> 
> Preference name: 	browser.cache.disk.parent_directory
> string value:		/tmp/firefox-cache
> 
> See: Running Ubuntu and other Linux flavors on an SSD « Brizoma.
> 
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Elvis Dowson

Chris Tapp

opensource at keylevel.com
www.keylevel.com



-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.yoctoproject.org/pipermail/yocto/attachments/20130903/60e09bc1/attachment.html>


More information about the yocto mailing list