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author | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2003-03-30 11:22:22 +0000 |
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committer | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2003-03-30 11:22:22 +0000 |
commit | 01f0236f58775e2bf60250caf2b9740bd9f988ea (patch) | |
tree | 52632602ec7a0d59e27c54773670de64266e89e9 /docs/htmldocs/speed.html | |
parent | cb830f05ae4ab5057209fb1b7c68bae450e78b22 (diff) | |
download | samba-01f0236f58775e2bf60250caf2b9740bd9f988ea.tar.gz samba-01f0236f58775e2bf60250caf2b9740bd9f988ea.tar.bz2 samba-01f0236f58775e2bf60250caf2b9740bd9f988ea.zip |
- Regenerate docs
- Document 'preload modules'
(This used to be commit 57407401d0f261d4b8e42fdc64479afef10211c3)
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/htmldocs/speed.html')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/htmldocs/speed.html | 42 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/speed.html b/docs/htmldocs/speed.html index 85863dcd5f..8ea3faf828 100644 --- a/docs/htmldocs/speed.html +++ b/docs/htmldocs/speed.html @@ -74,14 +74,14 @@ CLASS="CHAPTER" ><A NAME="SPEED" ></A ->Chapter 18. Samba performance issues</H1 +>Chapter 20. Samba performance issues</H1 ><DIV CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2890" ->18.1. Comparisons</A +NAME="AEN3320" +>20.1. Comparisons</A ></H1 ><P >The Samba server uses TCP to talk to the client. Thus if you are @@ -111,8 +111,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2896" ->18.2. Socket options</A +NAME="AEN3326" +>20.2. Socket options</A ></H1 ><P >There are a number of socket options that can greatly affect the @@ -139,8 +139,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2903" ->18.3. Read size</A +NAME="AEN3333" +>20.3. Read size</A ></H1 ><P >The option "read size" affects the overlap of disk reads/writes with @@ -165,8 +165,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2908" ->18.4. Max xmit</A +NAME="AEN3338" +>20.4. Max xmit</A ></H1 ><P >At startup the client and server negotiate a "maximum transmit" size, @@ -188,8 +188,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2913" ->18.5. Log level</A +NAME="AEN3343" +>20.5. Log level</A ></H1 ><P >If you set the log level (also known as "debug level") higher than 2 @@ -202,8 +202,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2916" ->18.6. Read raw</A +NAME="AEN3346" +>20.6. Read raw</A ></H1 ><P >The "read raw" operation is designed to be an optimised, low-latency @@ -224,8 +224,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2921" ->18.7. Write raw</A +NAME="AEN3351" +>20.7. Write raw</A ></H1 ><P >The "write raw" operation is designed to be an optimised, low-latency @@ -241,8 +241,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2925" ->18.8. Slow Clients</A +NAME="AEN3355" +>20.8. Slow Clients</A ></H1 ><P >One person has reported that setting the protocol to COREPLUS rather @@ -258,8 +258,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2929" ->18.9. Slow Logins</A +NAME="AEN3359" +>20.9. Slow Logins</A ></H1 ><P >Slow logins are almost always due to the password checking time. Using @@ -271,8 +271,8 @@ CLASS="SECT1" ><H1 CLASS="SECT1" ><A -NAME="AEN2932" ->18.10. Client tuning</A +NAME="AEN3362" +>20.10. Client tuning</A ></H1 ><P >Often a speed problem can be traced to the client. The client (for |