From 4d6b1b6836af6b8e46d03b2f0357a2d171a9c0cb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jelmer Vernooij Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 21:24:11 +0000 Subject: regenerate (This used to be commit bdee29ef5b45210c4d6477e5e764a8a298bebaa7) --- docs/htmldocs/speed.html | 141 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 141 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/htmldocs/speed.html (limited to 'docs/htmldocs/speed.html') diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/speed.html b/docs/htmldocs/speed.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b55989d053 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/htmldocs/speed.html @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +Chapter 39. Samba Performance Tuning

Chapter 39. Samba Performance Tuning

Paul Cochrane

Dundee Limb Fitting Centre

Jelmer R. Vernooij

The Samba Team

John H. Terpstra

Samba Team

Comparisons

+The Samba server uses TCP to talk to the client. Thus if you are +trying to see if it performs well, you should really compare it to +programs that use the same protocol. The most readily available +programs for file transfer that use TCP are ftp or another TCP-based +SMB server. +

+If you want to test against something like an NT or Windows for Workgroups server, then +you will have to disable all but TCP on either the client or +server. Otherwise, you may well be using a totally different protocol +(such as NetBEUI) and comparisons may not be valid. +

+Generally, you should find that Samba performs similarly to ftp at raw +transfer speed. It should perform quite a bit faster than NFS, +although this depends on your system. +

+Several people have done comparisons between Samba and Novell, NFS or +Windows NT. In some cases Samba performed the best, in others the worst. I +suspect the biggest factor is not Samba versus some other system, but the +hardware and drivers used on the various systems. Given similar +hardware, Samba should certainly be competitive in speed with other +systems. +

Socket Options

+There are a number of socket options that can greatly affect the +performance of a TCP-based server like Samba. +

+The socket options that Samba uses are settable both on the command +line with the -O option, or in the smb.conf file. +

+The socket options section of the smb.conf manual page describes how +to set these and gives recommendations. +

+Getting the socket options correct can make a big difference to your +performance, but getting them wrong can degrade it by just as +much. The correct settings are very dependent on your local network. +

+The socket option TCP_NODELAY is the one that seems to make the biggest single difference +for most networks. Many people report that adding +socket options = TCP_NODELAY +doubles the read performance of a Samba drive. The best explanation I have seen for +this is that the Microsoft TCP/IP stack is slow in sending TCP ACKs. +

Read Size

+The option read size affects the overlap of disk +reads/writes with network reads/writes. If the amount of data being +transferred in several of the SMB commands (currently SMBwrite, SMBwriteX and +SMBreadbraw) is larger than this value, then the server begins writing +the data before it has received the whole packet from the network, or +in the case of SMBreadbraw, it begins writing to the network before +all the data has been read from disk. +

+This overlapping works best when the speeds of disk and network access +are similar, having little effect when the speed of one is much +greater than the other. +

+The default value is 16384, but little experimentation has been +done as yet to determine the optimal value, and it is likely that the best +value will vary greatly between systems anyway. A value over 65536 is +pointless and will cause you to allocate memory unnecessarily. +

Max Xmit

+ At startup the client and server negotiate a maximum transmit size, +which limits the size of nearly all SMB commands. You can set the +maximum size that Samba will negotiate using the max xmit option +in smb.conf. Note that this is the maximum size of SMB requests that +Samba will accept, but not the maximum size that the client will accept. +The client maximum receive size is sent to Samba by the client and Samba +honors this limit. +

+It defaults to 65536 bytes (the maximum), but it is possible that some +clients may perform better with a smaller transmit unit. Trying values +of less than 2048 is likely to cause severe problems. +In most cases the default is the best option. +

Log Level

+If you set the log level (also known as debug level) higher than 2 +then you may suffer a large drop in performance. This is because the +server flushes the log file after each operation, which can be quite +expensive. +

Read Raw

+The read raw operation is designed to be an optimized, low-latency +file read operation. A server may choose to not support it, +however, and Samba makes support for read raw optional, with it +being enabled by default. +

+In some cases clients do not handle read raw very well and actually +get lower performance using it than they get using the conventional +read operations. +

+So you might like to try read raw = no and see what happens on your +network. It might lower, raise or not effect your performance. Only +testing can really tell. +

Write Raw

+The write raw operation is designed to be an optimized, low-latency +file write operation. A server may choose to not support it, however, and Samba makes support for +write raw optional, with it being enabled by default. +

+Some machines may find write raw slower than normal write, in which +case you may wish to change this option. +

Slow Logins

+Slow logins are almost always due to the password checking time. Using +the lowest practical password level will improve things. +

Client Tuning

+Often a speed problem can be traced to the client. The client (for +example Windows for Workgroups) can often be tuned for better TCP +performance. Check the sections on the various clients in +. +

Samba Performance Problem Due to Changing Linux Kernel

+A user wrote the following to the mailing list: +

+I am running Gentoo on my server and Samba 2.2.8a. Recently +I changed kernel version from linux-2.4.19-gentoo-r10 to +linux-2.4.20-wolk4.0s. And now I have a performance issue with Samba. +Many of you will probably say, “Move to vanilla sources!” +Well, I tried that and it didn't work. I have a 100mb LAN and two computers (Linux and +Windows 2000). The Linux server shares directories with DivX files, the client +(Windows 2000) plays them via LAN. Before when I was running the 2.4.19 kernel +everything was fine, but now movies freeze and stop. I tried moving +files between the server and Windows and it is terribly slow. +

+The answer he was given is: +

+Grab the mii-tool and check the duplex settings on the NIC. +My guess is that it is a link layer issue, not an application +layer problem. Also run ifconfig and verify that the framing +error, collisions, and so on, look normal for ethernet. +

Corrupt tdb Files

+Our Samba PDC server has been hosting three TB of data to our 500+ users +[Windows NT/XP] for the last three years using Samba without a problem. +Today all shares went very slow. Also the main smbd kept +spawning new processes so we had 1600+ running smbd's (normally we avg. 250). +It crashed the SUN E3500 cluster twice. After a lot of searching, I +decided to rm /var/locks/*.tdb. Happy again. +

+Question: Is there any method of keeping the *.tdb files in top condition or +how can I detect early corruption? +

+Answer: Yes, run tdbbackup each time after stopping nmbd and before starting nmbd. +

+Question: What I also would like to mention is that the service latency seems +a lot lower than before the locks cleanup. Any ideas on keeping it top notch? +

+Answer: Yes. Same answer as for previous question! +

-- cgit