Hi Shane,

Yes, It's hard to imagine that 2 copy's at the same time from the same share transfer faster than one copy. It's the world upside-down Funny you mention that you also switched to 64bits. I think the problem started somewhere my move from 32->64 bits.


I've got a few steps I want to make:

I'm going to set-up my configuration in a vmware environment, and check if the clients still got slow performance. As the whole system is being emulated, and the old configuration did work before, I think this is a small work-arround for me.

Next to this I'm going to see if I can install samba from scratch on debian. I run Debian stable. Debian has his own packaged and I don't want to mess with the global setup of the debian packages. I don't think that the installation will be hard, but uninstalling....I'm not sure.

Do you, or anybody else know a few test-cases, or debugs to look at?

Regards,
Gaston Bougie






Op 21-aug-2007, om 16:44 heeft Shane het volgende geschreven:

On Tue, Aug 21, 2007 at 08:26:27AM +0200, Gaston Bougie wrote:
Please see my Bug nr 488:
https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4889
I've experienced a few strange things I can't explain.

My situation looks very similar to this.

Does the copy go faster when you access an other (random) file on your
share?

Funny enough yes.  Both copies go faster when there are two
read ops from different hosts.

are you able to do make a copy from a share with the client in a vmware
session on the same samba server?

Unfortunately not, the server machine doesn't have X
installed.  I too have recently switched from ia32 to
x86_64 though if that helps.

Shane

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