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# NFS Performance Benchmark - Claude Analysis
**Date:** 2026-01-19
**Storage Class:** nfs-csi
**NFS Server:** 192.168.0.105:/nfs/NFS/ocp
**Test Environment:** OpenShift Container Platform (OCP)
**Tool:** fio (Flexible I/O Tester)
## Executive Summary
Performance testing of the NAS storage via nfs-csi storage class reveals actual throughput of **65-80 MiB/s** for sequential operations. This represents typical performance for 1 Gbps Ethernet NFS configurations.
## Test Configuration
### NFS Mount Options
- **rsize/wsize:** 1048576 (1MB) - optimal for large sequential transfers
- **Protocol options:** hard, noresvport
- **Timeout:** 600 seconds
- **Retrans:** 2
### Test Constraints
- CPU: 500m
- Memory: 512Mi
- Namespace: nfs-benchmark (ephemeral)
- PVC Size: 5Gi
## Benchmark Results
### Sequential I/O (1M block size)
#### Sequential Write
- **Throughput:** 70.2 MiB/s (73.6 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 70
- **Test Duration:** 31 seconds
- **Data Written:** 2176 MiB
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 49 µs
- 95th percentile: 75 µs
- 99th percentile: 212 ms (indicating occasional network delays)
#### Sequential Read
- **Throughput:** 80.7 MiB/s (84.6 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 80
- **Test Duration:** 20 seconds
- **Data Read:** 1615 MiB
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 9 ms
- 95th percentile: 15 ms
- 99th percentile: 150 ms
### Synchronized Write Test
**Purpose:** Measure actual NAS performance without local caching
- **Throughput:** 65.9 MiB/s (69.1 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 65
- **fsync latency:** 13-15ms average
This test provides the most realistic view of actual NAS write performance, as each write operation is synchronized to disk before returning.
### Random I/O (4K block size, cached)
**Note:** These results heavily leverage local page cache and do not represent actual NAS performance.
#### Random Write
- **Throughput:** 1205 MiB/s (cached)
- **IOPS:** 308k (cached)
#### Random Read
- **Throughput:** 1116 MiB/s (cached)
- **IOPS:** 286k (cached)
### Mixed Workload (70% read / 30% write, 4 concurrent jobs)
- **Read Throughput:** 426 MiB/s
- **Read IOPS:** 109k
- **Write Throughput:** 183 MiB/s
- **Write IOPS:** 46.8k
**Note:** High IOPS values indicate substantial local caching effects.
## Analysis
### Performance Characteristics
1. **Actual NAS Bandwidth:** ~65-80 MiB/s
- Consistent across sequential read/write tests
- Synchronized writes confirm this range
2. **Network Bottleneck Indicators:**
- Performance aligns with 1 Gbps Ethernet (theoretical max ~125 MiB/s)
- Protocol overhead and network latency account for 40-50% overhead
- fsync operations show 13-15ms latency, indicating network RTT
3. **Caching Effects:**
- Random I/O tests show 10-15x higher throughput due to local page cache
- Not representative of actual NAS capabilities
- Useful for understanding application behavior with cached data
### Bottleneck Analysis
The ~70 MiB/s throughput is likely limited by:
1. **Network Bandwidth** (Primary)
- 1 Gbps link = ~125 MiB/s theoretical maximum
- NFS protocol overhead reduces effective throughput to 55-60%
- Observed performance matches expected 1 Gbps NFS behavior
2. **Network Latency**
- fsync showing 13-15ms indicates network + storage latency
- Each synchronous operation requires full round-trip
3. **NAS Backend Storage** (Unknown)
- Current tests cannot isolate NAS disk performance
- Backend may be faster than network allows
## Recommendations
### Immediate Improvements
1. **Upgrade to 10 Gbps Networking**
- Most cost-effective improvement
- Could provide 8-10x throughput increase
- Requires network infrastructure upgrade
2. **Enable NFS Multichannel** (if supported)
- Use multiple network paths simultaneously
- Requires NFS 4.1+ with pNFS support
### Workload Optimization
1. **For Write-Heavy Workloads:**
- Consider async writes (with data safety trade-offs)
- Batch operations where possible
- Use larger block sizes (already optimized at 1MB)
2. **For Read-Heavy Workloads:**
- Current performance is acceptable
- Application-level caching will help significantly
- Consider ReadOnlyMany volumes for shared data
### Alternative Solutions
1. **Local NVMe Storage** (for performance-critical workloads)
- Use local-nvme-retain storage class for high-IOPS workloads
- Reserve NFS for persistent data and backups
2. **Tiered Storage Strategy**
- Hot data: Local NVMe
- Warm data: NFS
- Cold data: Object storage (e.g., MinIO)
## Conclusion
The NAS is performing as expected for a 1 Gbps NFS configuration, delivering consistent 65-80 MiB/s throughput. The primary limitation is network bandwidth, not NAS capability. Applications with streaming I/O patterns will benefit from the current configuration, while IOPS-intensive workloads should consider local storage options.
For significant performance improvements, upgrading to 10 Gbps networking is the most practical path forward.
---
## Test Methodology
All tests were conducted using:
- Ephemeral namespace with automatic cleanup
- Constrained resources (500m CPU, 512Mi memory)
- fio version 3.6
- Direct I/O where applicable to minimize caching effects
Benchmark pod and resources were automatically cleaned up after testing, following ephemeral testing protocols.
---
# NVMe Local Storage Benchmark - Comparison Analysis
**Date:** 2026-01-19
**Storage Class:** local-nvme-retain
**Storage Backend:** Local NVMe SSD
**Test Environment:** OpenShift Container Platform (OCP)
**Tool:** fio (Flexible I/O Tester)
## Executive Summary
Local NVMe storage dramatically outperforms network-attached NFS storage, delivering **30-85x** higher throughput for sequential operations. Sequential read performance reaches **6845 MiB/s**, while sequential write achieves **2109 MiB/s** - compared to NFS's 80 MiB/s and 70 MiB/s respectively.
## NVMe Benchmark Results
### Sequential I/O (1M block size)
#### Sequential Write
- **Throughput:** 2109 MiB/s (2211 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 2108
- **Test Duration:** 31 seconds
- **Data Written:** 64.1 GiB
- **Performance vs NFS:** **30x faster**
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 51 µs
- 95th percentile: 79 µs
- 99th percentile: 5.6 ms
#### Sequential Read
- **Throughput:** 6845 MiB/s (7177 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 6844
- **Test Duration:** 20 seconds
- **Data Read:** 134 GiB
- **Performance vs NFS:** **85x faster**
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 50 µs
- 95th percentile: 816 µs
- 99th percentile: 840 µs
### Random I/O (4K block size)
#### Random Write
- **Throughput:** 989 MiB/s (1037 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 253k
- **Test Duration:** 20 seconds
- **Data Written:** 19.3 GiB
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 1.4 µs
- 95th percentile: 1.8 µs
- 99th percentile: 2.2 µs
#### Random Read
- **Throughput:** 1594 MiB/s (1672 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 408k
- **Test Duration:** 20 seconds
- **Data Read:** 31.1 GiB
**Latency Distribution:**
- Median: 980 ns
- 95th percentile: 1.3 µs
- 99th percentile: 1.6 µs
### Synchronized Write Test
**Purpose:** Measure actual storage performance with fsync
- **Throughput:** 197 MiB/s (206 MB/s)
- **IOPS:** 196
- **fsync latency:** 4.9ms average
- **Performance vs NFS:** **3x faster** (197 vs 66 MiB/s)
- **Latency vs NFS:** **3x lower** (4.9ms vs 15ms)
The significantly lower fsync latency (4.9ms vs 15ms for NFS) demonstrates the advantage of local storage for durability-critical operations.
### Mixed Workload (70% read / 30% write, 4 concurrent jobs)
- **Read Throughput:** 294 MiB/s
- **Read IOPS:** 75.2k
- **Write Throughput:** 126 MiB/s
- **Write IOPS:** 32.4k
**Note:** Lower than random I/O tests due to contention from 4 concurrent jobs and mixed read/write operations.
## Performance Comparison: NFS vs NVMe
| Test Type | NFS (nfs-csi) | NVMe (local-nvme-retain) | Improvement Factor |
|-----------|---------------|---------------------------|-------------------|
| **Sequential Write** | 70 MiB/s | 2109 MiB/s | **30x** |
| **Sequential Read** | 81 MiB/s | 6845 MiB/s | **85x** |
| **Sync Write (fsync)** | 66 MiB/s | 197 MiB/s | **3x** |
| **Random Write 4K** | 1205 MiB/s* | 989 MiB/s | - |
| **Random Read 4K** | 1116 MiB/s* | 1594 MiB/s | **1.4x** |
| **Random Write IOPS** | 308k* | 253k | - |
| **Random Read IOPS** | 286k* | 408k | **1.4x** |
| **fsync Latency** | 13-15ms | 4.9ms | **3x lower** |
*Note: NFS random I/O results are heavily cached and don't represent actual NAS performance
## Key Insights
### 1. Sequential Performance Dominance
NVMe's sequential performance advantage is dramatic:
- **Write throughput:** 2109 MiB/s enables high-speed data ingestion
- **Read throughput:** 6845 MiB/s ideal for data analytics and streaming workloads
- **Latency:** Sub-millisecond latency for sequential operations
### 2. Realistic Random I/O Performance
Unlike NFS tests which show cached results, NVMe delivers:
- **True 4K random write:** 989 MiB/s (253k IOPS)
- **True 4K random read:** 1594 MiB/s (408k IOPS)
- **Consistent sub-microsecond latencies**
### 3. Durability Performance
For applications requiring data durability (fsync operations):
- **NVMe:** 197 MiB/s with 4.9ms fsync latency
- **NFS:** 66 MiB/s with 15ms fsync latency
- **Advantage:** 3x faster with 3x lower latency
This makes NVMe significantly better for databases and transactional workloads.
## Storage Class Selection Guide
### Use NVMe (local-nvme-retain) For:
1. **Database Workloads**
- High IOPS requirements (>10k IOPS)
- Low latency requirements (<1ms)
- Transactional consistency (fsync-heavy)
- Examples: PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, Cassandra
2. **High-Performance Computing**
- Large sequential data processing
- Analytics and data science workloads
- Machine learning training data
3. **Application Cache Layers**
- Redis, Memcached
- Application-level caching
- Session stores
4. **Build and CI/CD Systems**
- Fast build artifacts storage
- Container image layers
- Temporary compilation outputs
### Use NFS (nfs-csi) For:
1. **Shared Storage Requirements**
- Multiple pods accessing same data (ReadWriteMany)
- Shared configuration files
- Content management systems
2. **Long-Term Data Storage**
- Application backups
- Log archives
- Media file storage (videos, images)
3. **Cost-Sensitive Workloads**
- Lower priority applications
- Development environments
- Acceptable 65-80 MiB/s throughput
### Hybrid Approach (Recommended):
Implement a tiered storage strategy:
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Tier 1: NVMe (Hot Data) │
│ - Databases │
│ - Active application data │
│ - High-IOPS workloads │
│ Performance: 2000-7000 MiB/s │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
↓ Archive/Backup
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Tier 2: NFS (Warm Data) │
│ - Shared files │
│ - Application backups │
│ - Logs and archives │
│ Performance: 65-80 MiB/s │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
↓ Long-term storage
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Tier 3: Object Storage (Cold Data) │
│ - Long-term archives │
│ - Compliance data │
│ - Infrequently accessed backups │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
```
## Cost Considerations
### NVMe Local Storage:
- **Pros:** Exceptional performance, low latency, no network overhead
- **Cons:** Node-local (no pod mobility), limited capacity per node
- **Best for:** Performance-critical workloads where cost-per-IOPS is justified
### NFS Network Storage:
- **Pros:** Shared access, unlimited capacity, pod mobility across nodes
- **Cons:** Network-limited performance, higher latency
- **Best for:** Shared data, cost-sensitive workloads, large capacity needs
## Final Recommendations
1. **For New Database Deployments:**
- Use NVMe (local-nvme-retain) for primary storage
- Use NFS for backups and WAL archives
- Expected 30x performance improvement over NFS-only approach
2. **For Existing NFS-Based Applications:**
- Migrate performance-critical components to NVMe
- Keep shared/archival data on NFS
- Measure application-specific improvements
3. **For High-Throughput Applications:**
- NVMe sequential read (6845 MiB/s) enables near-real-time data processing
- Consider NVMe for any workload exceeding 100 MiB/s sustained throughput
4. **Network Upgrade Still Valuable:**
- Even with NVMe available, upgrading to 10 Gbps networking benefits:
- Faster pod-to-pod communication
- Better NFS performance for shared data
- Reduced network congestion
## Conclusion
Local NVMe storage provides transformational performance improvements over network-attached NFS storage, with 30-85x higher throughput for sequential operations and consistent sub-millisecond latencies. This makes NVMe the clear choice for performance-critical workloads including databases, analytics, and high-IOPS applications.
However, NFS remains essential for shared storage scenarios and cost-sensitive workloads where 65-80 MiB/s throughput is sufficient. The optimal strategy combines both: use NVMe for hot data requiring high performance, and NFS for shared access and archival needs.
The benchmark results validate that storage class selection should be workload-specific, with NVMe delivering exceptional value for performance-critical applications while NFS serves broader organizational needs for shared and persistent storage.

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# NAS Performance Benchmark Summary
**Date:** 2026-01-19
**Investigator:** Gemini Agent
## Problem Statement
User reported sluggish performance when accessing the NAS (`MiniMe.local`) mounted at `/Volumes/conan` on a laptop.
## Diagnostics Performed
### 1. Laptop (Client-Side)
- **Connection:** Wi-Fi (`en0`)
- **Latency (Ping):** Highly unstable, ranging from **7ms to 121ms**.
- **Throughput:**
- **Read:** ~12.7 MB/s (~100 Mbps)
- **Write:** ~6.5 MB/s (~52 Mbps)
### 2. OpenShift Cluster (Server-Side)
- **Connection:** Wired (assumed 1Gbps) via `nfs-csi` storage class.
- **Resources:**
- Namespace: `nas-speed-test` (ephemeral)
- PVC: `bench-pvc` (1Gi, `nfs-csi`)
- Pod: Alpine Linux with `dd`
- **Throughput:**
- **Write:** ~80.1 MB/s (sustained over 1GB write)
- **Read:** Cached speeds observed (~23 GB/s), indicating successful high-speed data access.
## Root Cause Analysis
The discrepancy between the laptop's performance (<15 MB/s) and the cluster's performance (~80 MB/s) isolates the issue to the **Wi-Fi connection** on the laptop. The NAS itself is capable of near-Gigabit speeds.
## Recommendations
1. **Switch to Wired:** Use an Ethernet cable for tasks requiring high throughput.
2. **Optimize Wi-Fi:** Ensure connection to a 5GHz band or move closer to the access point to reduce latency and jitter.
## Verification
- [x] Laptop `dd` tests confirmed low throughput.
- [x] Cluster `dd` tests confirmed high throughput.
- [x] Ephemeral test resources in `nas-speed-test` namespace have been cleaned up.

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# NAS Benchmark Results (nfs-csi)
Date: 2026-01-19
## Workload
- Tool: fio 3.35
- Pattern: randrw (70% read / 30% write)
- Block size: 4k
- I/O depth: 16
- Jobs: 4
- Size: 2GiB
- Runtime: 120s
- StorageClass: nfs-csi
- PVC: 10Gi RWX
## Results
- Read: IOPS=110, BW=441KiB/s (451kB/s), io=51.7MiB
- Write: IOPS=49, BW=197KiB/s (202kB/s), io=23.1MiB
## Notes
- fio output reported synchronous I/O with iodepth capped to 1 (psync engine).