Thanks, that is helpful information.  I'll have to hunt down the logs
to see since the files so far have been less than 100 meg.  It might
also be an issue with the particular computer I was uploading from.
Still if it is really helpful to know the ballpark.

Matt

On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 10:50 AM, Tim Donohue <tdono...@duraspace.org> wrote:
> Hi Matt,
>
> The uploads to the DSpace web front-end are highly dependent on your local
> internet connection speed.  So, the file size that can be uploaded may
> actually depend on whether you are located on-campus (usually has a faster
> internet speed) versus at a coffee shop (where internet speed could crawl).
>
> With quick internet speeds, you should have no problem uploading files which
> are at least 2GB in size (or even greater for really fast speeds). But, if
> you are on a much slower or shared connection (e.g. at a local coffee shop),
> you may start to hit problems in the range of 300-500 MB.
>
> A general rule of thumb I tend to use is that if the file is >2GB it's more
> likely you may need to upload it behind the scenes, from the commandline
> (though again, your mileage may vary based on your local internet speeds).
> Anything <2GB is usually uploadable on a decent internet connection.
>
> If you are hitting issues with smaller files, then there may be something
> else going on (possibly even a configuration issue, or a memory issue or
> similar).  We'd likely need more information as to what type and size of
> file are having issues, as well as whether there are any errors reported in
> your log files (under [dspace.dir]/log/dspace.log.[date]).
>
> Good luck,
>
> Tim
>
>
> On 2/13/2015 12:11 PM, Matthew Sherman wrote:
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I want to get some insight from the group on optimum file sizes for
>> uploading the web front-end?  I ask as we are having one of our students
>> digitize legacy theses and the files get decently sizable with a large
>> theses.  As such some of these have failed to properly upload.  So any
>> suggestions on the optimal size for uploading from the web front-end are
>> welcome.
>>
>> Matt Sherman
>>
>>
>>
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