From owner-freebsd-ports Mon Mar 13 7:33:55 2000 Delivered-To: freebsd-ports@freebsd.org Received: from got.wedgie.org (got.wedgie.org [216.181.169.146]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 605C937B585 for ; Mon, 13 Mar 2000 07:33:45 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from jgarman@got.wedgie.org) Received: by got.wedgie.org (Postfix, from userid 1000) id 5F647D907; Mon, 13 Mar 2000 10:33:31 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2000 10:33:31 -0500 From: Jason Garman To: ports@freebsd.org Subject: xmms port weirdness Message-ID: <20000313103331.A743@got.wedgie.org> Reply-To: jgarman@wedgie.org Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii X-Mailer: Mutt 0.95.4i X-Phase-Of-Moon: The Moon is Waxing Gibbous (54% of Full) Sender: owner-freebsd-ports@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.org This is a rather bizarre problem, but I figure you guys might know whats going on :) Basically my setup is this: 3.4-stable machine acting as NFS and FTP server among other things for a local network. 4.0-current machine on same network with latest xmms package installed. current machine mounts stable's nfs shares. xmms loads up a playlist of the nfs shared files... go ahead and play a few songs. Then, on the -current machine, ftp to the -stable machine and you get horrid transfer rates (on the order of ~200KB/sec on a 100bt network). Stop playing in xmms, transfer rates pop back up to 7-8MB/sec. This isn't an NFS problem-- copying a large file off of the nfs share in the background doesn't affect the transfer speeds of concurrent ftp sessions. It is *only* when xmms is playing a file off of the nfs share. The other strange thing is that ftp'ing the file to /dev/null instead of to disk (while playing a nfs-shared song in xmms) works fine; it is only when ftp'ing to disk that the problem surfaces. So, is this a port problem or a current problem? :) enjoy -- Jason Garman http://web.wedgie.org/ Student, University of Maryland jgarman@wedgie.org From fortune(1): Whois: JAG145 "... Had this been an actual emergency, we would have fled in terror, and you would not have been informed." To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-ports" in the body of the message