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Date:      Mon, 14 Apr 2008 20:04:17 -0400
From:      Robert Blayzor <rblayzor.bulk@inoc.net>
To:        Alfred Perlstein <alfred@freebsd.org>
Cc:        nawfal@googlemail.com, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: NFS and /etc/exports
Message-ID:  <10B588A9-926B-47DC-8CB5-581FFA77DA31@inoc.net>
In-Reply-To: <20080414232851.GU95731@elvis.mu.org>
References:  <1208170926.12349.20.camel@nawfal-desktop> <1886249E-54FF-4EFE-A7B9-C6AB2488EB4D@inoc.net> <20080414232851.GU95731@elvis.mu.org>

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On Apr 14, 2008, at 7:28 PM, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
>
>> Are -r and -w really needed/useful for TCP mounts?
>
> yes.


Really?  Please explain then, because the mount_nfs man page  
contradicts this...

"Set the read data size to the specified value.  It should nor-
  mally be a power of 2 greater than or equal to 1024.  This should
  be used for UDP mounts when the ``fragments dropped due to
  timeout'' value is getting large while actively using a mountpoint."

and

"Set the write data size to the specified value.  Ditto the comments  
w.r.t.
  the -r option, but using the ``fragments dropped due to timeout''  
value on
  the server instead of the client.  Note that both the -r and -w  
options should
  only be used as a last ditch effort at improving performance when  
mounting servers
  that do not support TCP mounts."


-- 
Robert Blayzor, BOFH
INOC, LLC
rblayzor@inoc.net
http://www.inoc.net/~rblayzor/

Mac OS X. Because making Unix user-friendly is easier than debugging  
Windows.









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