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@v-fox
v-fox / NVMe_tweaks.md
Last active November 22, 2025 20:03
Linux kernel optimizations for NVMe

By default Linux distros are unoptimized in terms of I/O latency. So, here are some tips to improve that.

Most apps still don't do multi-threaded I/O access, so it's a thread-per-app which makes per-app speed always bottlenecked by single-core CPU performance (that's not even accounting for stuttering on contention between multiple processes), so even with NVMe capable of 3-6 GB/s of linear read you may get only 1-2 GB/s with ideal settings and 50-150/100-400 MB/s of un/buffered random read (what apps actually use in real life) is the best you can hope for.

All writes are heavily buffered on 3 layers (OS' RAM cache, device's RAM cache, device's SLC-like on-NAND cache), so it's difficult to get real or stable numbers but writes are largelly irrelevant for system's responsiveness, so they may be sacrificed for better random reads.

The performance can be checked by:

  • `fio --name=read --readonly --rw={read/randread} --ioengine=libaio --iodepth={jobs_per_each_worker's_command} --bs={4k/2M} --direct={0/1} --num
@drmalex07
drmalex07 / README-setup-tunnel-as-systemd-service.md
Last active October 24, 2025 10:22
Setup a secure (SSH) tunnel as a systemd service. #systemd #ssh #ssh-tunnel #ssh-forward

README

Create a template service file at /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]. The template parameter will correspond to the name of target host:

[Unit]
Description=Setup a secure tunnel to %I
After=network.target