Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2018 15:56:00 -0400 From: Mike Tancsa <mike@sentex.net> To: =?UTF-8?Q?Karli_Sj=c3=b6berg?= <karli@inparadise.se>, freebsd-fs@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Linux NFS client and FreeBSD server strangeness Message-ID: <e0fd9886-8bc7-b4de-acd2-daf73e3e8dc1@sentex.net> In-Reply-To: <C3024CF7-3928-4DBF-9855-82451BDACE01@inparadise.se> References: <369fab06-6213-ba87-cc66-c9829e8a76a0@sentex.net> <2019ee5a-5b2b-853d-98c5-a365940d93b5@madpilot.net> <bc78744a-c668-cbbd-f6fd-0064e7f0dc46@sentex.net> <C3024CF7-3928-4DBF-9855-82451BDACE01@inparadise.se>
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On 4/4/2018 3:44 PM, Karli Sjöberg wrote: > > Although I understand it might be difficult for you, it would be interresting to know if a FreeBSD client exhibits the same behaviour. It may be a client problem instead of the server? I am starting to wonder if its the Linux client's (seeming) massive write caching, or the way that dump might sputter out data on linux.... It could be causing a certain edge case where the LINUX's NFS client doesnt bother writing for a while. I do note that the burst is pushing 8-9Gb/s. doing a straight up cat of /dev/zero to a file over NFS is nice and steady and works as expected. FreeBSD dump also works as expected, but then again, the client might have all sorts of different caching rules that are different igb1 Kbps in Kbps out 250.20 16.57 16299.44 441.57 121562.3 3267.12 304158.3 8128.84 205250.2 5485.41 159533.5 4294.59 252426.0 6465.67 59065.87 1587.44 109203.0 2935.75 139746.6 3750.78 167724.0 4735.38 96619.25 2597.97 ---Mike -- ------------------- Mike Tancsa, tel +1 519 651 3400 x203 Sentex Communications, mike@sentex.net Providing Internet services since 1994 www.sentex.net Cambridge, Ontario Canada
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