I tried this: nice -n 19 ionice -c3 rsync -av --bwlimit=20000 the problem remained, I stood in the controll room and watched the rdairplay screen, it would freeze for several seconds, run a few seconds, and freeze again, this went on for 2 minutes then I went and killed the rsync by ctrl-c, went back to the control room and this behaviour continued, to the end of the the song, then there was a period of dead air, the next element ( a liner) was jumped (it was not a hard time event either) and the next song played, things returned to normal at this point. the whole time the screen was freezing, the song that was playing played fine.
if I understood correctly, 20000 should be 20000 kB, so 20 mB/s, on a gigabit connection should not be a problem... what am I missing? I did notice that out of 4GB of RAM on the server, i had only ~300 mb free, but that seems it should be enough also. for curiosity though, how do I find what is using the memory and free some up if possible? Any suggestions where to look for my bottleneck? thanks. PS I tried the ionice and bwlimit on the box I run samba on and it worked well, this machine hosts a database for our timeclock software and the rsync backup made it grind to a halt and timeclock becam unresponsive, the machine was just a spare clunker we had when our old one died, and it is pretty low spec. these commands made the timeclock usable during the backup, sluggish, but useable. Nathaniel C. Steele Assistant Chief Engineer/Technical Director WTRM-FM / TheCrossFM On 10/2/2012 1:36 PM, James Harrison wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Correspondingly, the ionice command may help. > > Cheers, > James Harrison > > On 02 October 2012 18:08:33, Stan Fotinos wrote: >> Hi Nathan >> >> Have you tried using the following option? --bwlimit= >> >> Stan >> >> On 2/10/12 11:26 PM, Nathan Steele wrote: >>> Hi all, >>> >>> Having a problem with rsync lately (don't recall having it before, but >>> not sure what changed, or maybe I just didn't notice). >>> >>> The background info: >>> Rivendell broadcast appliance on a server machine with a 6 drive raid 5 >>> (hardware controller) hosting mysql and /var/snd, and the delta 1010 >>> audio card, rivendell broadcast appliance on an airplay machine, CAE >>> running on the server (airplay runs on this machine but the audio comes >>> out the server soundcard). A network drive is mounted as /backup on the >>> server machine. the rivendell machines have gigabit nics and are on a >>> gigabit switch, the network drive is 100 megabit nic. >>> >>> The problem: >>> Running rsync -alv /var/snd /backup causes latency between the songs >>> playing out. the songs play fine once they start, but we get a few >>> seconds of dead air between songs, and it really throws the jocks off if >>> they are on air. >>> >>> niceing it didn't help at all nice -n 19 rsync -alv /var/snd /backup, >>> actually seemed to make it worse... >>> >>> I can't imagine the network is clogging....the cpu utilization seems to >>> be fine, as well as RAM....... >>> >>> Any Ideas? >>> >>> the purpose of course is to backup my audio. any suggestions? am I using >>> the wrong switches? should I be using a negative number for nice? (I >>> read the docs and it seemed like i wanted a positive number..) >>> >>> thanks, >>> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Rivendell-dev mailing list >> Rivendell-dev@lists.rivendellaudio.org >> http://lists.rivendellaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/rivendell-dev > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v2.0.17 (MingW32) > Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://www.enigmail.net/ > > iEYEARECAAYFAlBrJjQACgkQ22kkGnnJQAxBTwCfTo1GVT5aPy23MmauYyyYkj0M > yK0AoJpj226/UfoDlXkljfrfxlQaI2VC > =xzYa > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > _______________________________________________ > Rivendell-dev mailing list > Rivendell-dev@lists.rivendellaudio.org > http://lists.rivendellaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/rivendell-dev > > > _______________________________________________ Rivendell-dev mailing list Rivendell-dev@lists.rivendellaudio.org http://lists.rivendellaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/rivendell-dev