Our e-mail server started to slow down today. One of the disk devices is frequently at 100% usage. The heavy writes seem to cause reads to run quite slowly. In the statistics below, `c0t0d0'' is UFS, containing the / and /var slices. `c0t1d0'' is ZFS, containing /var/log/syslog, a couple of databases, and the GNU mailman files. It''s this latter disk that''s been hitting 100% usage. $ iostat -xn 5 3 extended device statistics r/s w/s kr/s kw/s wait actv wsvc_t asvc_t %w %b device 8.2 57.8 142.6 538.2 0.0 1.7 0.1 25.2 0 48 c0t0d0 5.8 273.0 303.4 24115.9 0.0 18.6 0.0 66.7 0 73 c0t1d0 extended device statistics r/s w/s kr/s kw/s wait actv wsvc_t asvc_t %w %b device 0.0 57.2 0.0 294.6 0.0 1.3 0.0 22.1 0 64 c0t0d0 0.2 370.2 1.1 33968.5 0.0 31.4 0.0 84.9 1 100 c0t1d0 extended device statistics r/s w/s kr/s kw/s wait actv wsvc_t asvc_t %w %b device 0.8 61.0 6.4 503.0 0.0 2.5 0.0 40.0 0 70 c0t0d0 0.0 295.8 0.0 35273.3 0.0 35.0 0.0 118.3 0 100 c0t1d0 This system is running Solaris 10 5/09 on a Sun 4450 server. Both the disk devices are actually hardware-mirrored pairs of SAS disks, with the Adaptec RAID controller. Can anything be done to either reduce the amount of I/O or to improve the write bandwidth? I assume that adding another disk device to the zpool will double the bandwidth. /var/log/syslog is quite large, reaching about 600 megabytes before it''s rotated. This takes place each night, with compression bringing it down to about 70 megabytes. The server handles about 500,000 messages a day. -- -Gary Mills- -Unix Group- -Computer and Network Services-