PaulCochrane Dundee Limb Fitting Centre
paulc@dth.scot.nhs.uk
&author.jelmer;
Samba performance issues 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 a NT or WfWg 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 very much depends on your system. Several people have done comparisons between Samba and Novell, NFS or WinNT. In some cases Samba performed the best, in others the worst. I suspect the biggest factor is not Samba vs 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 right 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 very little effect when the speed of one is much greater than the other. The default value is 16384, but very little experimentation has been done 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 honours 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 very expensive. Read raw The read raw operation is designed to be an optimised, 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 don't 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 affect your performance. Only testing can really tell. Write raw The write raw operation is designed to be an optimised, 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. Note that this problem only occurs on slow servers(e.g. 486 and lower). LDAP LDAP can be vastly improved by using the ldap trust ids parameter. 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 and Other Clients. </chapter>