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  3. Cloudron v9: huge disk I/O is this normal/safe/needed?

Cloudron v9: huge disk I/O is this normal/safe/needed?

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  • imc67I imc67

    @girish said in Cloudron v9: huge disk I/O is this normal/safe/needed?:

    'docker stats'

    it's impossible to have a view with this, every second tens of docker containers are created (cron?) so it keeps listing and growing.

    Is there a proper way to do some inspections with disk I/O in mind? Or shall I give you access to have a view?

    jamesJ Offline
    jamesJ Offline
    james
    Staff
    wrote last edited by
    #8

    Hello @imc67
    Could it be that you simply need to zoom out of your terminal or make the window larger?
    Had the same first thought when running this command but when resizing the window or zooming out:

    4b9b8272-3458-4bf8-8e45-7adb9cc95592-image.png

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    • imc67I Offline
      imc67I Offline
      imc67
      translator
      wrote last edited by
      #9

      @girish right but where to look?

      Scherm­afbeelding 2025-12-02 om 08.36.34.png

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      • jamesJ Offline
        jamesJ Offline
        james
        Staff
        wrote last edited by
        #10

        Hello @imc67
        Can you run the following command:

        iotop -aoP
        

        This gives a live view of what is currently writing IO to the disk.
        Maybe this output can give some more indications where this is coming from.

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        • imc67I Offline
          imc67I Offline
          imc67
          translator
          wrote last edited by
          #11

          its not default installed:

          Command 'iotop' not found, but can be installed with:
          apt install iotop    # version 0.6-24-g733f3f8-1.1ubuntu0.1, or
          apt install iotop-c  # version 1.21-1
          
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          • nebulonN Offline
            nebulonN Offline
            nebulon
            Staff
            wrote last edited by
            #12

            yeah it is not installed by default, but you can safely install iotop via apt on your system.

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            • imc67I Offline
              imc67I Offline
              imc67
              translator
              wrote last edited by
              #13

              and now?

              Scherm­afbeelding 2025-12-02 om 11.44.57.png

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              • jamesJ Offline
                jamesJ Offline
                james
                Staff
                wrote last edited by
                #14

                Hello @imc67
                You can either deselect it or press OK, restarting services should cause no issues.

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                • imc67I Offline
                  imc67I Offline
                  imc67
                  translator
                  wrote last edited by
                  #15

                  ok thanks, below the result after just a few minutes, I'm not a technician but as far as I can see it's mainly mysql which is writing (I sorted Write):
                  de0b4ce4-096f-4c6b-977b-dcf6574125ea-Scherm­afbeelding 2025-12-02 om 14.30.00.png

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                  • nebulonN Offline
                    nebulonN Offline
                    nebulon
                    Staff
                    wrote last edited by
                    #16

                    Since we debugged some other issue on that server, was also taking a look at the disk I/O. So basically the mysql service is doing a lot of disk I/O (also as see in the screenshot).

                    It does seem the mysql addon is just queried and written to a lot. So likely one of the many installed apps using it might commit a lot to the database. I didn't want to stop apps, but maybe you can try to stop individual apps which use mysql one-by-one to hopefully find the one which causes the constant writes.

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                    • imc67I Offline
                      imc67I Offline
                      imc67
                      translator
                      wrote last edited by imc67
                      #17

                      Thanks @nebulon for your time, together with ChatGPT I did deeper analysis but I also read this: https://docs.cloudron.io/troubleshooting/#mysql

                      Two instances of MySQL
                      There are two instances of MySQL on Cloudron. One instance runs on the host and is used by the platform. Another instance is the MySQL addon which runs in a container named mysql and is shared by apps. This test is related to the host MySQL.
                      

                      Doesn't this mean that the mysql service in iotop is the "host version" that has nothing to do with the apps?

                      For now "we" (I) have seen this:

                      Summary of Disk Write I/O Observation on Cloudron Host

                      • Using iotop, the host shows consistently high disk write I/O (4–5 MB/s).
                      • Analysis of MySQL processes (mysqld) indicates these are responsible for the majority of the write load.
                      • The high write I/O is primarily due to InnoDB internal activity: buffer pool flushes, redo log writes, and metadata updates, mostly from the box database (eventlog, tasks, backups).

                      In about 10 minutes this is the Disk Write I/O (so 1.5GB in 10 minutes)

                      Total DISK READ:         0.00 B/s | Total DISK WRITE:         2.73 M/s
                      Current DISK READ:       0.00 B/s | Current DISK WRITE:       4.25 M/s
                          TID  PRIO  USER     DISK READ DISK WRITE>  SWAPIN      IO    COMMAND                                                                                                                  
                        21250 be/4 messageb      0.00 B   1038.50 M  ?unavailable?  mysqld
                          936 be/4 mysql         0.00 B    465.28 M  ?unavailable?  mysqld
                      

                      I stopped about 25% of the apps at a certain moment with no significant result, this is the current situation (IMHO not really intensive application and they have low traffic):

                      App 	Status 
                      Yourls	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                      WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                      Taiga	Stopped 
                      Surfer	Running 
                      Surfer	Stopped 
                      Roundcube	Running 
                      Roundcube	Running 
                      Omeka S	Stopped 
                      Moodle	Stopped 
                      LAMP	Running 
                      Roundcube	Running 
                      Roundcube	Running 
                      Roundcube	Running 
                      Pretix	Stopped 
                      MiroTalk SFU	Running 
                      Matomo	Running 
                      FreeScout	Running 
                      FreeScout	Running 
                      Espo CRM	Running 
                      

                      What to do next to find the root cause?

                      avatar1024A 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • imc67I imc67

                        Thanks @nebulon for your time, together with ChatGPT I did deeper analysis but I also read this: https://docs.cloudron.io/troubleshooting/#mysql

                        Two instances of MySQL
                        There are two instances of MySQL on Cloudron. One instance runs on the host and is used by the platform. Another instance is the MySQL addon which runs in a container named mysql and is shared by apps. This test is related to the host MySQL.
                        

                        Doesn't this mean that the mysql service in iotop is the "host version" that has nothing to do with the apps?

                        For now "we" (I) have seen this:

                        Summary of Disk Write I/O Observation on Cloudron Host

                        • Using iotop, the host shows consistently high disk write I/O (4–5 MB/s).
                        • Analysis of MySQL processes (mysqld) indicates these are responsible for the majority of the write load.
                        • The high write I/O is primarily due to InnoDB internal activity: buffer pool flushes, redo log writes, and metadata updates, mostly from the box database (eventlog, tasks, backups).

                        In about 10 minutes this is the Disk Write I/O (so 1.5GB in 10 minutes)

                        Total DISK READ:         0.00 B/s | Total DISK WRITE:         2.73 M/s
                        Current DISK READ:       0.00 B/s | Current DISK WRITE:       4.25 M/s
                            TID  PRIO  USER     DISK READ DISK WRITE>  SWAPIN      IO    COMMAND                                                                                                                  
                          21250 be/4 messageb      0.00 B   1038.50 M  ?unavailable?  mysqld
                            936 be/4 mysql         0.00 B    465.28 M  ?unavailable?  mysqld
                        

                        I stopped about 25% of the apps at a certain moment with no significant result, this is the current situation (IMHO not really intensive application and they have low traffic):

                        App 	Status 
                        Yourls	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Stopped 
                        WordPress (Developer)	Running 
                        Taiga	Stopped 
                        Surfer	Running 
                        Surfer	Stopped 
                        Roundcube	Running 
                        Roundcube	Running 
                        Omeka S	Stopped 
                        Moodle	Stopped 
                        LAMP	Running 
                        Roundcube	Running 
                        Roundcube	Running 
                        Roundcube	Running 
                        Pretix	Stopped 
                        MiroTalk SFU	Running 
                        Matomo	Running 
                        FreeScout	Running 
                        FreeScout	Running 
                        Espo CRM	Running 
                        

                        What to do next to find the root cause?

                        avatar1024A Offline
                        avatar1024A Offline
                        avatar1024
                        wrote last edited by
                        #18

                        @imc67 said in Cloudron v9: huge disk I/O is this normal/safe/needed?:

                        I stopped about 25% of the apps at a certain moment with no significant result

                        I think @nebulon was suggesting to stop apps one by one to see if one particular app is causing the problem.

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                        • robiR Offline
                          robiR Offline
                          robi
                          wrote last edited by
                          #19

                          Generally such system behavior is accompanied by higher CPU and Memory usage, so you can start with stopping those, and see which one causes a dip MySQL usage.

                          Conscious tech

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                          • imc67I Offline
                            imc67I Offline
                            imc67
                            translator
                            wrote last edited by imc67
                            #20

                            It’s a production server, isn’t it ridiculous to stop these apps to watch resource behavior? There must be tools or ways to find the root cause don’t you think?

                            Beside that it’s the host MySQL does it has anything to do with apps?

                            robiR 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • imc67I imc67

                              It’s a production server, isn’t it ridiculous to stop these apps to watch resource behavior? There must be tools or ways to find the root cause don’t you think?

                              Beside that it’s the host MySQL does it has anything to do with apps?

                              robiR Offline
                              robiR Offline
                              robi
                              wrote last edited by
                              #21

                              @imc67 Holding that limiting belief is keeping your problem unresolved, no?

                              Sure, then trace it from the MySQL side, find which user, which container and so on..

                              Yes, it has everything to do with the Apps that are using that DB instance.

                              Conscious tech

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                              • jamesJ Offline
                                jamesJ Offline
                                james
                                Staff
                                wrote last edited by
                                #22

                                Hello @imc67
                                You can use the PID from the process to figure out what mysql service it is.

                                e.g. your iotop shows for mysqld the pid 1994756.
                                You can run systemctl status mysql.service and there is the pid displayed:

                                ● mysql.service - MySQL Community Server
                                     Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/mysql.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
                                     Active: active (running) since Mon 2025-12-01 09:17:59 UTC; 1 week 5 days ago
                                   Main PID: 1994756 (mysqld)
                                     Status: "Server is operational"
                                      Tasks: 48 (limit: 4603)
                                     Memory: 178.7M (peak: 298.0M swap: 95.4M swap peak: 108.7M)
                                        CPU: 1h 41min 31.520s
                                     CGroup: /system.slice/mysql.service
                                             └─1994756 /usr/sbin/mysqld
                                
                                Notice: journal has been rotated since unit was started, output may be incomplete.
                                

                                So from iotop I can confirm that the system mysqld service is pid 1994756 so I'd know to inspect the system mysqld service and not the docker mysql service.

                                You can also get the pid from the mysqld inside the docker container with docker top mysql:

                                docker top mysql
                                UID                 PID                 PPID                C                   STIME               TTY                 TIME                CMD
                                root                1889                1512                0                   Nov07               ?                   00:06:17            /usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/supervisord --configuration /etc/supervisor/supervisord.conf --nodaemon -i Mysql
                                usbmux              3079                1889                0                   Nov07               ?                   03:49:38            /usr/sbin/mysqld
                                usbmux              3099                1889                0                   Nov07               ?                   00:00:11            node /app/code/service.js
                                

                                Then I know the mysqld pid of the docker service is 3079 which I can check again with the system:

                                ps uax | grep -i 3079
                                usbmux      3079  0.4  1.0 1587720 43692 ?       Sl   Nov07 229:38 /usr/sbin/mysqld
                                

                                Now we can differentiate between the two.


                                Okay.
                                Now that we can differentiate between the two, you can observe iotop and see which one has a high I/O.
                                After you narrow it down to either one, then we can do some analysis what database / table get accesses the most even further narrow it down.

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