Linux MGLRU: Massive 30% MongoDB Boost & 100% HDD Gains
Introduction: I have spent three decades watching servers completely choke on bad memory management, but the new Linux MGLRU is finally changing the game. Back in the early days of sysadmin work, a sudden spike in database queries meant your swap file was going to catch fire. We spent hours tweaking sysctl parameters just to keep the out-of-memory (OOM) killer at bay. Today, you don't need a PhD in kernel tuning to see massive performance gains on your database servers. Thanks to recent patches, systems are seeing a 30% throughput increase for MongoDB workloads. Even crazier? Machines still running on older spinning hard drives (HDDs) are seeing improvements north of 100%. Let's break down exactly why this matters for your infrastructure. Why Linux MGLRU Matters Right Now For the uninitiated, MGLRU stands for Multi-Generational Least Recently Used. It is a complete overhaul of how the Linux kernel decides which pages of memory to keep in RAM and which to pus...