Configure NFS Write Performance

Describes how to set the optimal value for outstanding Remote Procedure Call (RPC) requests to the NFS server.

The default Remote Procedure Call (RPC) requests configuration can negatively impact performance and memory. To avoid performance and memory issues, configure the number of outstanding RPC requests to the NFS server to be 128, for optimal performance. The NFS client uses this value to determine when to send requests to the NFS server, along with the number of parallel requests to send.

  • If the value is too small, the NFS client does not send many parallel requests. This scenario results in decreased performance.
  • If the value is too high, the NFS client sends a lot of parallel requests, but the NFS server discards some requests, as it has a limit on the number of requests it can handle. This scenario causes the NFS client to resend the requests, and negatively affects performance.

The kernel tunable value sunrpc.tcp_slot_table_entries represents the number of simultaneous RPC requests. The default value of this tunable is 16 (on Red Hat versions prior to version 6.3). On Red Hat versions 6.3 and above, the default value of this tunable is set at 65536. Increasing or decreasing this value to 128 (depending on the Red Hat version in use), may improve write speeds. Use the command sysctl -w sunrpc.tcp_slot_table_entries=128 to set the value. Add an entry to your sysctl.conf file to make the setting persist across reboots.

Perform the following steps as the root user, on each NFS client machine:

  1. Issue the following commands to create the sunrpc.conf file under /etc/modprobe.d with the recommended configuration. These commands enable the configuration to persist after a reboot of the NFS client machine.
    echo "options sunrpc tcp_slot_table_entries=128" >> /etc/modprobe.d/sunrpc.conf
    echo "options sunrpc tcp_max_slot_table_entries=128" >>  /etc/modprobe.d/sunrpc.conf
  2. Issue the following echo commands. These commands enable the configuration to take effect after you remount the NFS client to the NFS for the HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric gateway.
    echo 128 > /proc/sys/sunrpc/tcp_slot_table_entries
    echo 128 > /proc/sys/sunrpc/tcp_max_slot_table_entries
  3. Remount the NFS client to the NFS for the HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric gateway. Mount the data-fabric NFS server with a rsize and wsize of 128K, as this value significantly cuts down NFS server requests for a given transfer, and improves the overall performance. For example, the following commands unmount and mount the NFS server, assuming that the cluster is mounted at /mapr.
    umount /mapr
    mount -o nolock,rsize=131072,wsize=131072 <hostname>:/mapr /mapr
  4. After rebooting the node, if the /proc/sys/sunrpc directory is not available, or if rpcidmapd is not running, start the rpcidmapd service, using the following command: service rpcidmapd start.
Failure to set this tunable to an optimum value, may result in the following error in the /opt/mapr/logs/nfsserver.log file:
ERROR nfsserver[38960] fs/nfsd/requesthandle.cc:791 0.0.0.0[0] cannot allocate more OncRpcContexts: [numDropped=2556001] dropping connection from nfsc=10.13.64.225:0

NFS for the HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric write performance varies between different Linux distributions. The recommended value of this tunable may have no effect, or even a negative effect on your particular cluster.