Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2003 03:25:39 -0800 From: Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com> To: Atte Peltomaki <atte.peltomaki@iki.fi> Cc: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: NFS lagging Message-ID: <3E4A2F33.245C2148@mindspring.com> References: <20030212102523.GA45290@naama>
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Atte Peltomaki wrote: > I'm running FreeBSD 5.0-RELEASE on a dual P3 800MHz/512MB/Tekram DC-390 > SCSI. Moved all my IDE disks on another 'puter to access via NFS. So I > ended up putting up a Debian server, because some of the disks were > already in ext2fs. Now I'm experiencing heavy lag on my desktop when I > use the NFS intensively, like copy a large file over. I get these 1-3 > second pauses in everything, looks like ssh lag but it's local(!). Mouse > pointer in X doesn't seem affected, but even console lags if you type > in. Run tcpdump on the wire, to determine if it's a delay in the FreeBSD box sending a request, or a delay in the Linux box servicing it. Doing a tcpdump will tell you for sure; anything else, and you are just guessing where the problem is, and we would be just guessing where the fix is. > I'm using NFSv3, tried it over TCP too, but since it's LAN, i dropped > back to UDP. This is not a good reason to use UDP, unless you drop your read and write size so that a full packet plus UDP and IP headers, all fits in a single MTU. Using UDP with large read/write sizes is the same thing as using a fixed window (a fixed window of x = read_write_size/usable_MTU), instead of the sliding window you get with TCP... and why in heck would you want to do that? Particularly since UDP fragment reassembly is a bugger, and the packets are not retransmitted on a drop, and UDP opens you up to packets-without-the-response-bit-set attacks from outside, for any holes in your firewall, whereas TCP doesn't. > Here's dmesg: [ ... some not useful stuff ... ] FreeBSD 5.0-RELEASE #4: Fri Feb 7 01:39:20 EET 2003 root@naama:/usr/src/sys/i386/compile/NAAMA [ ... lot's of not very useful stuff ... ] > xl0: <3Com 3c905C-TX Fast Etherlink XL> port 0xe000-0xe07f mem 0xda002000-0xda00207f irq 15 at device 11.0 on pci0 > xl0: Ethernet address: 00:50:da:df:09:7b > miibus0: <MII bus> on xl0 > xlphy0: <3c905C 10/100 internal PHY> on miibus0 > xlphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, auto This tells me that you've recompiled your kernel 4 times; it would be nice to know why, and what the differences are between the distribution kernel, and the kernel you are using, if this thread continues. The xl driver has been known to be problematic. It has had several updates since 5.0-RELEASE. See: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/pci/if_xl.c for details. My suggestion is that you update the driver (the if_xl.c file and the registers header file, if_xlreg.h) and try compiling your kernel again. You should also switch back to TCP, unless you are prepared to rewrite the UDP fragment reassembly code. If the problem persists, then you should contact the -questions list with relevent differences between your kernel config file and GENERIC (not your whole config file!), and go from there. PS: This question should have been sent to -questions, since it involves a -RELEASE version. -- Terry To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
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