Am Dienstag, 2. November 2004 17:50 schrieb Andre Guibert de Bruet: > On Tue, 2 Nov 2004, Emanuel Strobl wrote: > > Am Dienstag, 2. November 2004 13:47 schrieb Claus Guttesen: > >>> problems, but I'm wondering why I > >>> can't write to my 5.3-stable NFS server more that > >>> 3,5MB/s while reading gives > >>> me 9,5MB/s? > >> > >> Are you using IDE- or SCSI-disks? Reading is faster > >> than writing on IDE. > > > > Like I wrote, the server writes more than 35MB/s onto the RAID5 array. > > Last time I saw a hard drive which has problems with 10MB/s was 6 years > > ago, no matter of IDE or SCSI. > > You are going by the assumption that the benchmarks are run using > transfers of a single, contiguous, abnormally huge file. In the real > world, things aren't that peachy. Remember to factor in things such as > seek times, drive response latency, driver locking and contention on > Giant (This is a SCSI RAID card, isn't it?), among other things... It's a IDE Raid controller (3ware 7506-4, a real one) and the file is indeed huge, but not abnormally. I have a harddisk video recorder, so I have lots of 700MB files. Also if I copy my photo collection from the server it takes 5 Minutes but copying _to_ the server it takes almost 15 Minutes and the average file size is 5 MB. Fast Ethernet isn't really suitable for my needs, but at least the 10MB/s should be reached. I can't imagine I get better speeds when I upgrade to GbE, (which the important boxes are already, just not the switch) because NFS in it's current state isn't able to saturate a 100baseTX line, at least in one direction. That's the real anstonishing thing for me. Why does reading staurate 100BaseTX but writes only a third? Thanks, -Mano > > Regards, > Andy > > | Andre Guibert de Bruet | Enterprise Software Consultant > > | Silicon Landmark, LLC. | http://siliconlandmark.com/ > > > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-current_at_freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-current > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-current-unsubscribe_at_freebsd.org"
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