Bottleneck Search

We did some basic profiling, and this allows us to eliminate a few bottlenecks as the cause of the performance issues. As we discussed in the first article, network performance wasn't an issue: we used a direct Gigabit Ethernet link between client and server. On average, the server received 4 Mbit/s and sent 19 Mbit/s of data, with a peak of 140 Mbit/s. That peak of 140 Mbit/s is only achieved when running at the highest performance (500-600 queries per second); the Apple machine stayed well below that peak.

Another theory is published in a personal blog: the fsync() theory. Basically, the command forces the OS to write all the pending data to the disk drive, and then forces the disk drive to write all the data in its write cache to the platters. The theory is that most OSes do not force the last step, while Mac OS X does. However, this theory is not the reason for the lackluster performance that we noticed.

First of all, we saw at most 23 KB/s writes, again at peak performance, in the case of the Dual G5 running Mac OS X at 274 queries per second. To avoid excessive writing, our Dbbench client has a warm-up period where the database is put under load but no measurements take place. This makes our benchmarking consistent, and lowers the pressure on the disk system. You can read more about our MySQL test methods here. Secondly, we were using the MyISAM database engine, which does not support this "transactional safe writing".

MySQL Configuration

We played around with all the configurations' variables mentioned here, but none of them made any real difference for the Mac OS X MySQL performance. Again, the "query cache" was off, as we wanted to test worst case performance. More info on why we test this way can be found here.

For those who are curious, we did a quick test with "query cache on". The Apple machine scored about 500 queries per second. In the case of the Linux x86 machines, we had to use several clients. It seems that each client can fire off at most 1000 queries per second. This appears to be a Windows 2003 limitation, since faster Opterons (2.6 GHz instead of 2.4 GHz) or quad Opteron clients (instead of dual) couldn't get us past this limit either. With several clients firing off queries, the Linux machines were capable of a peak of 2700 queries per second (and probably more - we had 3 clients at most), while the Mac was still limited to 500 queries per second. Note that this is "best case" performance, since up to 60% of the queries were picked out of the cache. With more random queries, these numbers are significantly lower.

Let us see if LMBench can make us wiser, now that we can compare Linux and Mac OS X on the Apple PowerMac.

The Xserve Server Platform Low level benchmarking on Mac OS X and Linux
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  • Lori - Friday, September 2, 2005 - link

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microkernel">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microkernel

    MacOS X uses a modified microkernel (a monolithic / microkernel hybrid). The idea was to cut down IPC costs by putting servers that would be IPC heavy directly into the kernel. However, there has recently been a lot of work in the microkernel world to reduce this IPC cost and bring its speed near that of a monolithic kernel.

    L4Ka::Pistachio is an example of this:
    http://www.l4ka.org/">http://www.l4ka.org/
  • leviat - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    If the problem is indeed in the thread creation portion of the OS, it would be interesting to see how a single threaded webserver fairs. I would love to see a benchmark test of Lighttpd (www.lighttpd.org) to see a comparison of how that runs on Darwin vs linux-ppc.

    Another interesting test would be to see MySQL can be configured to precreate the handler threads. This might allow us to see how it handles the context-switching between the multiple threads and allow for it to compete.

    Anyways, great article!
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, September 2, 2005 - link

    What exactly to do you mean by single threaded? Because Apache 1.3 works with processes, and is thus single-threaded per user.

    MySQL can make use of a Thread cache, we played with it but it didn't give any substantial boost. I don't see how the software would be able to precreate all threads as it has close down and open connections. If you got some insight, please share :-).

    Context switching is quite fast on the G5 OS X, give or take a few percentages compared to Linux x86 or G5 Linux, as we tested with lmbench.
  • Lori - Friday, September 2, 2005 - link

    Actually there are more than one way to handle multiple connections in a server application.

    To give you some examples...

    1. Multi process
    2. Multi thread
    3. Some hybrid of the two

    You can see combinations of these types all provided by Apache 2's MPMs. (perchild, prefork, threadpool, worker, leader.. etc)

    4. Asynchronus multiplexing.

    Your program becomes its own schedular. You can do all your processing within a single thread. Also read up on non blocking i/o. I am actually surprised apache does not have a MPM to handle this type of connection multiplexing but I also read its harder to get OS support.

    Letsee... links... umm... ahh...:

    http://www.kegel.com/c10k.html">http://www.kegel.com/c10k.html
  • Avalon - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    Seems like once you remove the G5 from OSX, it's a very capable chip.
  • jamawass - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    Great article, in response to the previous post Anand has posted tons of server articles on x86 systems so Apple is fair game here. Secondly Apple servers are based on OSX in the market, corporations want to know the real world performance not the desktop feel. Also Johan's speculation on Apple's move to Intel raises some troubling questions for Apple execs.
  • karlreading - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    a lot of people commenting on how apple have mad a wrong dicision turning to intel.
    possibly, but IMHO, and, if im not mistaken, didnt the opteron dominate all the tests.
    so in my mind whilst its true for people to doubt apple for going intel, x86 on the whole is still a very viable option if you go the AMD route.
    yes i know people will say AMD dont hae the capacity, but amd powered macs should be how x86 macs are done.
    karlos
  • karlreading - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    also worth noting is that they say the FP poerformance is as good as the fastest x86 chip. well scuse me, but isnt that a 2.7ghz g5 part there testing there? thats the fastest g5 currently avalible isnt it? well then why not test the opteron 254. thats the fastest x86 chip, running 2.8ghz, rather than the 850/250 2.4ghz part tested? that would put some lead against the g5 and also, 2.8ghz is a lot closer than 2.4ghz is to the 2.7ghz g5's core speed. if were trying to be fair.
    if we was being really picky we would be stating duakl core opteron as the fastest x86, but i digress....
    karlos
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, September 2, 2005 - link

    You are right about the recentely introduced 2.8 GHz Opteron. Well, to be really accurate, at the time of the introduction of the 2.7 GHz G5, a 2.6 Ghz opteron was available.

    Anyway, It was not my intention to be "accurate", it was more a general impression. Give or take a few percent, the G5 can compete FP wise :-).
  • Pannenkoek - Thursday, September 1, 2005 - link

    It's a matter of scalability, SMP support and not so much of how fast some system calls are executed as the reason for the bad performance I would think. Linux is the most used OS for superclusters these days, Mac OS remains a desktop OS. It's no wonder that it performs poorly as a serious server on a multiprocessor/core system. It would have been interesting to see how Windows would have faired (on the x86 of course), if we are testing OSes in this way.

    However, MySQL benchmarks say little about desktop performance, Anandtech's audience consists of desktop users and the reason people love or hate Mac OS is its desktop. Nevertheless, almost a great article. It should have been if the autor could have resisted the temptation of too much speculation, instead of honest benchmark numbers.

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