Try disabling apm.
# config -e -o /nbsd /bsd
ukc disable apm
252 apm0 disabled
ukc quit
# cp /bsd /obsd
# mv /nbsd /bsd
# reboot
If that speeds it up you have the hlt hlt issue. it's fixed in
current and stable
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
Everything is working fine except that when I copy files to the box from
a Windows XP box
On 7/19/05, Gary Clemans-Gibbon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Forgot about the /dev/null idea. interesting result. I scp'd a 10 Mb
file from my gentoo box and it completed fast in a few seconds - speed
3.3 Mb/s. Not great but faster than the other experiences.
I then did the same with a 2.5Gb
Darren Tucker wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Also I have just grabbed the stable branch from cvs and am running
stable GENERIC and still doesn't fix it. Just a recap - the problem is
not just samba writes to either of the data disks from the network via
samba or scp are painfully slow.
Darren Tucker wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Also I have just grabbed the stable branch from cvs and am running
stable GENERIC and still doesn't fix it. Just a recap - the problem is
not just samba writes to either of the data disks from the network via
samba or scp are painfully slow.
On Tue, 19 Jul 2005, Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Darren Tucker wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Also I have just grabbed the stable branch from cvs and am running stable
GENERIC and still doesn't fix it. Just a recap - the problem is not just
samba writes to either of the data disks from
Thanks David,
I just tried that line but it seems to be the same or if anything it
seems even slower.
Gary
David Gwynne wrote:
I would suggest looking at the socket options parameter in /etc/samba/
smb.conf. I have the following in my smb.conf and transfer speeds seem
to perform a lot
This is really puzzling me, please someone help me out.
I've tried a couple of things. Firstly I swapped out the NIC for a
different brand, no change. Writes god-awful slow, reads nice and zippy.
I did some googling and tried some things. Here are the results of
ifconfig -a
netstat -in
Thanks for your reply Tim. If anything it makes me feel worse. I was
hoping it was something easily fixed.
I just tried transferring a 50 Mb file to the OBSD samba box from win
using SCP. Again very slow writes but much faster reads. The 50 Mb file
took about 7 mins to transfer to the OBSD
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Thanks for your reply Tim. If anything it makes me feel worse. I was
hoping it was something easily fixed.
I just tried transferring a 50 Mb file to the OBSD samba box from win
using SCP. Again very slow writes but much faster reads. The 50 Mb
file took about 7
file locally?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Gary Clemans-Gibbon
Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2005 3:45 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Writes to samba server very, very slow
Thanks for your reply Tim. If anything
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
whoa.
no where near enough RAM.
Trip over the power cord, you will end up swapping during
From: Gary Clemans-Gibbon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thanks for your reply Tim. If anything it makes me feel worse. I was
hoping it was something easily fixed.
I just tried transferring a 50 Mb file to the OBSD samba box from win
using SCP. Again very slow writes but much faster reads. The 50 Mb file
Or you could disable apm0 and see if that helps.
-Original Message-
From: David Gwynne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 19 July 2005 01:57 PM
To: Gary Clemans-Gibbon
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Writes to samba server very, very slow
From: Gary Clemans-Gibbon [EMAIL
Nick Holland wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
whoa.
no where near enough RAM.
Trip over the power cord, you will end
Marius Van Deventer - Umzimkulu wrote:
Or you could disable apm0 and see if that helps.
-Original Message-
From: David Gwynne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 19 July 2005 01:57 PM
To: Gary Clemans-Gibbon
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Writes to samba server very, very slow
On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 02:34:04PM +0200, Michael Hamerski wrote:
the FAQ which you refer to mentions 1M per 1G of storage, so that's not
really 1G of RAM for this system, is it? or is there a reason I'm missing?
no...256M would in theory do it (assuming nothing bigger than around
200G in one
Making, drinking tea and reading an opus magnum from Alexander Bochmann:
...on Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 12:56:03AM -0700, Tim Hammerquist wrote:
I've seen this same phenomenon when copying to from my OSX Powerbook and
my fileserver (running both FreeBSD 5 and Gentoo Linux), with the OSX
Garance A Drosihn wrote:
At 11:15 PM -0700 7/18/05, Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Thanks David,
I just tried that line but it seems to be the same or if
anything it seems even slower.
I missed the start of this thread, but make sure that you do not
have a duplex-mismatch with your ethernet
On 7/19/05, Stephen Marley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 01:28:17PM -0700, Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
A little bit more info,
i ran the following...
snip
dont forget to use netstat -i (-e on windows) to look
for errors on the line, which would be indicative of
lan
Stephen Marley wrote:
On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 01:28:17PM -0700, Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
A little bit more info,
i ran the following...
.
$ ifconfig -m dc0
dc0: flags=8843UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST mtu 1500
address: 00:50:bf:9c:62:e4
media: Ethernet
I've had this problem before. Other protocols work OK (not great, but
OK), but Samba is gets modem speeds on a fast ethernet connection. I've
had some success in the past by manually specifying the network speed
and duplexing. See man hostname.if for info on how to do that (pay
particular
--On 19 July 2005 10:46 -0500, Daniel Ramaley wrote:
I've had this problem before. Other protocols work OK (not great, but
OK), but Samba is gets modem speeds on a fast ethernet connection.
I've had poor speeds samba-windows before and sometimes been able to
fix it by just disabling and
Stephen Marley wrote:
Have you tried a crossover cable, bypassing the switch?
Words of wisdom right there. I would definitely try a crossover cable
between the OpenBSD server and your client machine. That will show you
whether the problem lies with Samba or elsewhere. I remember
Avtar Gill wrote:
Stephen Marley wrote:
Have you tried a crossover cable, bypassing the switch?
Words of wisdom right there. I would definitely try a crossover cable
between the OpenBSD server and your client machine. That will show you
whether the problem lies with Samba or elsewhere.
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Yes, I've tried different cables and different ports on the switch.
This hardware has all been used before together. I cycled the power to
the switch (can't find a reset button) and no change. Via samba or SCP
it takes 7 minutes to write a file to the server and 12
Tim Hammerquist wrote:
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Yes, I've tried different cables and different ports on the switch.
This hardware has all been used before together. I cycled the power to
the switch (can't find a reset button) and no change. Via samba or SCP
it takes 7 minutes to write a file
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I heeded your words of wisdom and after some rummaging I found a crossover
cable. Hooked it up the same winXP box direct and the exact same result.
Sounds like a bad nic. If you have a spare, you might try swapping with it.
Also, what's the other machine and what is
Don Koch wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I heeded your words of wisdom and after some rummaging I found a crossover
cable. Hooked it up the same winXP box direct and the exact same result.
Sounds like a bad nic. If you have a spare, you might try swapping with it.
Also, what's the other
On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 09:50:03PM -0400, Don Koch wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I heeded your words of wisdom and after some rummaging I found a crossover
cable. Hooked it up the same winXP box direct and the exact same result.
Sounds like a bad nic. If you have a spare, you might
Sounds like a bad nic. If you have a spare, you might try
swapping with it.
Also, what's the other machine and what is it running?
The NIC is fine, and yes I swapped it out early on as well as the cable
and the port on the switch. I've also tried a crossover cable. I've also
How about a nic from a different mfr? Using another good 'dc' nic
doesn't
rule out a basic hardware incompatibility related directly to that brand
of nic card coupled with your other hardware.
JB
.
Even though it worked fine with RH7.3 a three + year old OS ?
I've seen specific
John Brooks wrote:
How about a nic from a different mfr? Using another good 'dc' nic
doesn't
rule out a basic hardware incompatibility related directly to that brand
of nic card coupled with your other hardware.
JB
.
Even though it worked fine with RH7.3 a three + year old OS ?
I've
Gary Clemans-Gibbon wrote:
Also I have just grabbed the stable branch from cvs and am running
stable GENERIC and still doesn't fix it. Just a recap - the problem is
not just samba writes to either of the data disks from the network via
samba or scp are painfully slow. Reads from the box to the
Hi All,
I just built a OpenBSD 3.7 samba file server for my home lan. It's a P3
500, 128mb RAM, with a 2 gig IDE HDD for the OS and two x Maxtor 200 GB
IDE drives for data.
Everything is working fine except that when I copy files to the box from
a Windows XP box the transfers are very slow,
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