Thanks for the reply. From my understanding, XFS comes with the added benefit of being more resilient to file system corruption as well. There is lots of talk about big writes, the question is more related to using the Postgress database. With larger Check Point managements controlling 20+ gateway objects and having 10+ admins with write access hammering the management every day, there are a lot of slowdowns when opening and closing objects, searching and especially when publishing changes.
Tossing additional CPU cores and RAM onto the host has been the "easy solution" thus far, but you reach a point where you are just adding icing on top of the cake with barely any added value. R81.10 improved the performance somewhat, but there are still complaints. In one of the more demanding environments I'm working on, we have done pretty much anything we can do at this point, like making sure the disk is using thick provisioning instead of thin provisioning, making sure all the CPU cores are linked to a specific socket and are not using virtual cores / SMT cores, tried to tweak the CPM heap size manually. Currently, we are sitting at 12-cores (Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 5218R CPU @ 2.10GHz), 128GB RAM on its running local SSD storage with VMFS6 file system on the VMware ESXi server.
Very tempted to try moving this to R81.20 using the VMware Paravirtual controller, as the PVSCSI is a part of the slightly bumped kernel on R81.20. But I'm not that into VMware, disk alignment and disk utilisation to grasp what to expect as performance gains by doing so. Having JHF install faster is not something anyone cares about unless it's taking an obscene amount of time. Sames goes for snapshots etc. It's the friction caused by Smart Console slow-downs daily that is causing frustration.
We split the management into three different installations with the move to R81.10. They are now running a dedicated management installation, a dedicated log server and a dedicated smart event server. All three are living on the very same VMware ESXi server, though, so they are still competing for the same underlying hardware. But it's a new ESXi server dedicated to running only these three hosts, and the server itself, with Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 5218R CPU @ 2.10GHz, 384 GB RAM and 26TB SSD, should be capable of handling this one would think.
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