LoneRangir
Cadet
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2014
- Messages
- 7
I'm new to FreeNAS and I'm having very poor performance writing to the NAS.
The setup includes:
FreeNAS-9.3-STABLE-201412142326
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1220 V2 @ 3.10GHz
16082MB
6 x 800GB Crucial M500DC SSDs
RAIDZ2 configuration
I am checking out an SVN project to the array. This is all done under linux and NFS. The project has mostly small files, totaling about 1GB in size. A study of the directory makeup produced this histogram:
File Size
(KB).........count
1..............4244
2..............2128
4..............2562
8..............2305
16.............2477
32.............1547
64.............957
128............607
256............243
512............288
1024...........123
2048...........32
4096...........15
8192...........13
16384..........22
32768..........6
65536..........2
The checkout time is abysmal. It takes over 40 minutes. On another network directory on a different server it takes about 6 minutes or so. If I check out to a local hard drive on a linux workstation, it takes about 2 or 3 minutes.
Any insight would be appreciated.
The setup includes:
FreeNAS-9.3-STABLE-201412142326
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1220 V2 @ 3.10GHz
16082MB
6 x 800GB Crucial M500DC SSDs
RAIDZ2 configuration
I am checking out an SVN project to the array. This is all done under linux and NFS. The project has mostly small files, totaling about 1GB in size. A study of the directory makeup produced this histogram:
File Size
(KB).........count
1..............4244
2..............2128
4..............2562
8..............2305
16.............2477
32.............1547
64.............957
128............607
256............243
512............288
1024...........123
2048...........32
4096...........15
8192...........13
16384..........22
32768..........6
65536..........2
The checkout time is abysmal. It takes over 40 minutes. On another network directory on a different server it takes about 6 minutes or so. If I check out to a local hard drive on a linux workstation, it takes about 2 or 3 minutes.
Any insight would be appreciated.
Last edited: