Scott Lovenberg escribió:
Felipe Martinez Hermo wrote:
Scott Lovenberg escribió:
On Feb 6, 2008 4:19 AM, Felipe Martinez Hermo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sinisa Bandin escribió:
Felipe Martinez Hermo wrote:
OK, so we're apples
Scott Lovenberg escribió:
On Feb 6, 2008 4:19 AM, Felipe Martinez Hermo [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sinisa Bandin escribió:
Felipe Martinez Hermo wrote:
OK, so we're apples to apples, so to speak; the servers are tuned
the same
Sinisa Bandin escribió:
Felipe Martinez Hermo wrote:
OK, so we're apples to apples, so to speak; the servers are tuned
the same. I'll assume your disks are tuned from hdparm and up to
snuff, otherwise you wouldn't be tuning sockets ;). Did your old
server have samba settings
OK, so we're apples to apples, so to speak; the servers are tuned the
same. I'll assume your disks are tuned from hdparm and up to snuff,
otherwise you wouldn't be tuning sockets ;). Did your old server
have samba settings for oplocks set?
--
Peace and Blessings,
-Scott.
Of course,
Hi, everybody!
I have been using samab on Debian for years and I have recently migrated
my file server from version 3.0.14a-3sarge2 to 3.0.24-6etch4.
One or our applications stores its data in a shared folder. This data is
distributed in over 29000 files of about 1k-40k and is so much
root 0 2008-02-01 13:32 vfs_cache_pressure 0
10
3000
40
500
0
0
65536
957
2
0
50
3
60
100
Scott Lovenberg escribió:
Felipe Martinez Hermo wrote:
Hi, everybody!
I have been using samab on Debian for years and I have recently
migrated my file server from version 3.0.14a-3sarge2 to 3.0.24
Hi, everybody!
I am having certain problems accessing my Samba domain.
I have set up several XP SP2 clients to access a Samba 3.0.10 PDC
running on a Debian testing server.
Problem #1: Suddenly, the domain stopped working: it could not even be
accessed browsing