Correct as per the quoted response from Microsoft support on the previous page, they are currently porting the hot fix to the current branch.JaySt wrote:if this patch would fix the problems seen in this thread and for which Veeam is so actively trying come up with a fix with MS , i think we would have seen some sort of announcement through Gostev maybe, something like "we're getting close to a fix.. hold on...". Would be quite special to have a patch (or THE patch) drop down from the sky like this.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
So... if i understand corretly they solved the performance issues for some (us included) but not the crash issue which others with not enough RAM have?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Excessive RAM usage was the very first issue they have solved.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
observation worth mentioning. Even though Im running the latest patch with the beta refs driver I am seeing improved speed with fast clones. It went from 5 hours back to roughly 2-1/2 hours. Im not sure what else they fixed but its an improvement for sure!
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
We ported all our backups back to REFS last weekend. One thing worth mentioning is that the active fulls were really fast. I checked the statistics and most active fulls were even faster than with NTFS on the same storage! It was completely different with the "old" REFS driver where it was always much slower than with NTFS!
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Trying to get up to speed here as we have been seeing crashes on our on-host backups recently. At this point is there anything we need to do other than fully patch our hosts and Veeam servers via windows update?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
crucial question, WHEN does it crash and we can guide you. Time the job with what is happening, take a look at the logs report back.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
I received the following reply from Microsoft support regarding my 0x133 BSOD events.
I opened a ticket with Veeam support, and was told to pose the question to the forums so Tier 3 or a developer could address it.Due to complexity of the code changes required to handle the hard WS limit.
At this point, you should check with the backup software vendor if they are using the API to set the hard limit on WS and if affirmative, then recommend them not to do so.
NtSetSystemInformation api called with flag MM_WORKING_SET_MAX_HARD_ENABLE.
This API requires that caller has SeIncreaseQuotaPrivilege privilege.
Kindly check with your backup vendor if they are using the above mention ApI.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
That doesn't seem right. I love that tier 3 and development participate in the forums, but if support cannot communicate internally with them, that's pretty dysfunctional.lepphce1 wrote:I opened a ticket with Veeam support, and was told to pose the question to the forums so Tier 3 or a developer could address it.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
I thought it was odd as well.mkaec wrote: That doesn't seem right. I love that tier 3 and development participate in the forums, but if support cannot communicate internally with them, that's pretty dysfunctional.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Except they don't... but in any case, the response would be totally unacceptable even if they were here. Sorry about that - I've been fighting this behavior as well, but it does keep happening. I am not sure what's up with that. I have forwarded this to the support management for review.mkaec wrote:I love that tier 3 and development participate in the forums
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Hi there.
I updated the server and I am running on ReFS 10.0.14393.1532.
At the moment it seems like it is really slow (compared to NTFS), but the merge to synthetic full seems to be working without locking the server.
I have a ReFS iSCSI target at ta Synology NAS and it is running like a charm for months, it ain't super fast but it is doing its job.
I have the strange feeling that Storage Spaces is causing some issues, so I will change the RAID setup.
At the moment I am running Storage Spaces and I want to change it to a HP RAID.
There was a post where someone had experienced problems with a certain cluster size when creating the new RAID, but I cannot find it anymore.
Could that someone please point me to the right settings, BIG thank you!
I will keep you guys updated.
John
I updated the server and I am running on ReFS 10.0.14393.1532.
At the moment it seems like it is really slow (compared to NTFS), but the merge to synthetic full seems to be working without locking the server.
I have a ReFS iSCSI target at ta Synology NAS and it is running like a charm for months, it ain't super fast but it is doing its job.
I have the strange feeling that Storage Spaces is causing some issues, so I will change the RAID setup.
At the moment I am running Storage Spaces and I want to change it to a HP RAID.
There was a post where someone had experienced problems with a certain cluster size when creating the new RAID, but I cannot find it anymore.
Could that someone please point me to the right settings, BIG thank you!
I will keep you guys updated.
John
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
refering to this ? https://www.virtualtothecore.com/en/vee ... ripe-size/
storage spaces is a disaster imho
storage spaces is a disaster imho
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
I would not call storage spaces a disaster, but indeed so far it proved to be slower than any hardware raid solution. We are suggesting customers use for now hardware raid solutions and avoid storage spaces, if you want to have high performance, especially parity modes. You lose self-healing of blocks without mirror or parity modes, but you still have scrubbing, and higher performance. A good hardware raid card is one of the first design choices to be done when building a server repository.
Luca Dell'Oca
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https://www.virtualtothecore.com/
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
@Gostev I sent you my case number via PM. Thanks!Gostev wrote:Except they don't... but in any case, the response would be totally unacceptable even if they were here. Sorry about that - I've been fighting this behavior as well, but it does keep happening. I am not sure what's up with that. I have forwarded this to the support management for review.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Hello, another patch Tuesday has come and gone. When can we expect to see the beta ReFS driver rolled into a production patch ?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
I'm not using Veeam. But, using REFS for another backup system. Noticed one of the backup systems crashing weekly. Then started being more frequent. Long story short, after applying the July 2017 update which had REFS fixes -- the system continued crashing (may have gotten even worse). Looking at the minidump, it was still reporting the culprit as REFS. Logged a as with their premier support and they confirmed it to still be an issue with REFS. They said it was fixed in Windows 10 but needs to be backported to Server 2016. Didn't give me an ETA after I asked for it but I would think its still at least 1 patch cycle away.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
same here, tried the latest patch all hell broke loose. Went back to the Beta ReFs and its more stable but not 100%. No word from Veeam so far.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Can't say it is. We have been using Storage Spaces since day 1 and never had a SS related issue. However we only use "simple" and mirrored backed by Adapted Raids. Biggest benefit is being able to create thin volumes from them, we use these to mave mutiple 64TB's to use dedupe on.antipolis wrote:refering to this ? https://www.virtualtothecore.com/en/vee ... ripe-size/
storage spaces is a disaster imho
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Hello again.
I finally have been able to reconfigure our backup server.
For a week I used a Synology NAS as an ReFS iSCSI target, after a week I finally killed the StorageSpaces "RAID" and went back to the good old HP Smart Array RAID5.
I did the first full backup over the weekend and will see if the Windows 2016 (with all actual patches) will run smoothly.
Bevor it froze after about two weeks, that was on local SAS drives with StorgeSpaces.
And I have a couple numbers that I wanted to share:
iSCSI NTFS
94MB/s
5.2TB transferred 18h:42m
SAS ReFS (StorageSpaces)
20MB/s
5.2TB transferred 75h:52m
iSCSI ReFS
80MB/s
5.2TB transferred 10h:45m
SAS ReFS (HP RAID)
140MB/s
5.2TB transferred 10h:45m
Regrads,
John
I finally have been able to reconfigure our backup server.
For a week I used a Synology NAS as an ReFS iSCSI target, after a week I finally killed the StorageSpaces "RAID" and went back to the good old HP Smart Array RAID5.
I did the first full backup over the weekend and will see if the Windows 2016 (with all actual patches) will run smoothly.
Bevor it froze after about two weeks, that was on local SAS drives with StorgeSpaces.
And I have a couple numbers that I wanted to share:
iSCSI NTFS
94MB/s
5.2TB transferred 18h:42m
SAS ReFS (StorageSpaces)
20MB/s
5.2TB transferred 75h:52m
iSCSI ReFS
80MB/s
5.2TB transferred 10h:45m
SAS ReFS (HP RAID)
140MB/s
5.2TB transferred 10h:45m
Regrads,
John
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Since you are now running Raid 5 on your HP I assume you went for Parity with Storage Spaces, bad choice... SS Parity is the worst implementation of Raid ever. However, SS Mirror works beautifully. SInce your Backups are over 5TB I assume your repository is quite big. Do you really trust Raid 5 when a disk fails?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Hey.
Yes I am running RAID 5.
One full backup uses around 7+TB and I should keep at least 2 weeks on disk and that DL380 is completely packed with disks.
But I configured one additional disk as HotSpare and if the gates of Hell open and that server dies, I still have LTO tapes of the last 3 weeks.
What would you have recommended, RAID6?
Regards,
John
Yes I am running RAID 5.
One full backup uses around 7+TB and I should keep at least 2 weeks on disk and that DL380 is completely packed with disks.
But I configured one additional disk as HotSpare and if the gates of Hell open and that server dies, I still have LTO tapes of the last 3 weeks.
What would you have recommended, RAID6?
Regards,
John
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Some years ago we were running 2 Storage arrays with local Raid 5 groups. These 2 arrays were mirrored to each other by network Raid 1. Everyone said we were crazy to do that, using so much space for redundancy, guess what? We still had downtime and data loss... Personally, I made the mistake to use Raid 5 and Raid 6 again and again, in the end, the only Raid which never had issues was mirroring, everything else has failed for some reason, disk dying or even parity errors during restores. I would always do Raid 10 now on local arrays, no matter what... You know everything works until you really really need it (and then the gates of Hell open as you already said).
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Honestly, single parity with disks larger than 2TB, you are looking for problems. URE (unrecoverable read errors) are a thing, and large disks many times are SATA, so with even less error control functions in them. So, you have a system that is more prone to errors, and on top of it, you have ZERO protection for the entire time that it takes to rebuild a raid group. And with large disks, rebuild times are loooooooong, hot spare just allows for the rebuild to start immediately, indeed, but it's not enough in my opinion. I want at least double parity.
So you know, we are suggesting all our customers designing server-based repositories, to go for a good hardware raid card (agree with Guido, SS parity is too slow...), and choose a double parity configuration, like 6 (mostly on small groups) or 60 (in large disk sets). Raid-10 eliminates parity issues indeed, but it's not exactly like having double protection. You cannot lose "any" two disks, only some combinations. And again during the rebuild you are totally unprotected in that specific R-1 subgroup (hence our suggestion for Raid-60 in many designs).
So you know, we are suggesting all our customers designing server-based repositories, to go for a good hardware raid card (agree with Guido, SS parity is too slow...), and choose a double parity configuration, like 6 (mostly on small groups) or 60 (in large disk sets). Raid-10 eliminates parity issues indeed, but it's not exactly like having double protection. You cannot lose "any" two disks, only some combinations. And again during the rebuild you are totally unprotected in that specific R-1 subgroup (hence our suggestion for Raid-60 in many designs).
Luca Dell'Oca
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https://www.virtualtothecore.com/
vExpert 2011 -> 2022
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Principal EMEA Cloud Architect @ Veeam Software
@dellock6
https://www.virtualtothecore.com/
vExpert 2011 -> 2022
Veeam VMCE #1
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
OK - I now officially give up ReFS. I have initially worked with Veeam and later on the ReFS development team at MS for the last 6 months and the results are not very good.
Tested all possible regsettings, different versions of refs.sys, different version of ntfs core files but performance is still a lot worse than using NTFS.
While ReFS seems to be a good idea for smaller backups, it´s a disaster for larger ones. My vbk:s are about 60TB and my daily backups are 6TB.
I managed to get merge times to almost the same as when using NTFS, but disk load during backup is way higher with ReFS compared to NTFS. Disk queue lenght during backup went from 0,05 to 1+.
Now I have a 3+ week migration back to NTFS ahead of me :/
Tested all possible regsettings, different versions of refs.sys, different version of ntfs core files but performance is still a lot worse than using NTFS.
While ReFS seems to be a good idea for smaller backups, it´s a disaster for larger ones. My vbk:s are about 60TB and my daily backups are 6TB.
I managed to get merge times to almost the same as when using NTFS, but disk load during backup is way higher with ReFS compared to NTFS. Disk queue lenght during backup went from 0,05 to 1+.
Now I have a 3+ week migration back to NTFS ahead of me :/
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
@JimmyO, how about the latest patch currently begin backported to Window Server 2016 mentioned a few posts back? No hope for that one ?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
That´s the one that made merge time almost same as NTFS. Better, but not good enough...JaySt wrote:@JimmyO, how about the latest patch currently begin backported to Window Server 2016 mentioned a few posts back? No hope for that one ?
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
thanks for trying the last 6 months and reporting back, seriously appreciated. it's good to have this kind of feedback from the real world and to have people try this new tech. it's really dissapointing to see this technology and solution fail for such a long time.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Hi JimmyOJimmyO wrote:OK - I now officially give up ReFS. I have initially worked with Veeam and later on the ReFS development team at MS for the last 6 months and the results are not very good.
Tested all possible regsettings, different versions of refs.sys, different version of ntfs core files but performance is still a lot worse than using NTFS.
While ReFS seems to be a good idea for smaller backups, it´s a disaster for larger ones. My vbk:s are about 60TB and my daily backups are 6TB.
I managed to get merge times to almost the same as when using NTFS, but disk load during backup is way higher with ReFS compared to NTFS. Disk queue lenght during backup went from 0,05 to 1+.
Now I have a 3+ week migration back to NTFS ahead of me :/
Maybe i could dump my settings from registry to compare.
With the ReFS beta driver my problems have gone away.
My setup is as follows.
4xUCS C3260M4
256GB Ram
64x10TB running Raid6 on Cisco HW controllor.
2620v4 CPU
Doing around 40 TB backup.
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Re: REFS 4k horror story
Thanks Thomas,
I use a HP server, DL380Gen8 High Performance. 2x2650 CPU, 192 GB ram , 4x raid setups of 35x4TB using raid 6 on HP P431 Controller.
Pls. let me know your current registry keys/settings (at the moment I have removed them all..).
Also - are you running the latest cumulative windows patch (2017-08, KB4034658) ?
I use a HP server, DL380Gen8 High Performance. 2x2650 CPU, 192 GB ram , 4x raid setups of 35x4TB using raid 6 on HP P431 Controller.
Pls. let me know your current registry keys/settings (at the moment I have removed them all..).
Also - are you running the latest cumulative windows patch (2017-08, KB4034658) ?
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