On Tue, Nov 4, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Jeff Kalchik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> I'm talking about opening a terminal on local /home with few folders >>> which have few hounded gb in them. >>> I'm not connection to anything at that point. I'm talking about >>> opening a nautilus browser and that takes 2 seconds. >>> Not sure what ldap, windbind or nscd have to do with file system >>> access time? The file system is a local and is accessed on a local >>> machine. >>> >> They are about network user accounts and security. And if there are >> problems with these long delays can occur. I assume you are not using >> any of these. > > FWIW, I have a system here at home (openSuSE 11.0, Ultra160 disk shelf, 5 > 180gb disks in a RAID5 LUN under mdadm control.) I don't see that sort of > delay anywhere in the filesystems on that LUN.
Let me be more specific. I'm am looking for some commands that I could do benchmarks, raid5 optimization, and I/O optimization on HDD/memory. The system is busy, there is bacula at night, vmware running windows2000 with a mail client on there, there is samba (but its not used except for me). So the machine is busy enough but I shouldn't experience these delays. I think my cpu, memory and hdd speeds are enough for twice the load. So what commands can I use to figure out what is going on. Luca ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Moblin Your Move Developer's challenge Build the coolest Linux based applications with Moblin SDK & win great prizes Grand prize is a trip for two to an Open Source event anywhere in the world http://moblin-contest.org/redirect.php?banner_id=100&url=/ _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users