angelkiller2
Dabbler
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2016
- Messages
- 10
So I'm having some performance issues with my FreeNas box. I've created a basic two drive mirror. I make two datasets. I share one with NFS, the other with CIFS. Windows can copy to the CIFS share at 100+ MB/s. Windows then copies to the NFS share at ~25 MB/s. Linux (Debian Testing) copies to the NFS share at 100+ MB/s. Then Debian copies to the CIFS share at about 35 MB/s.
The environment is fairly simple, I don't have anything crazy going on. The FreeNAS box is a HP Microserver Gen 8. 12 GB (ECC) RAM, 4x 3TB Seagate Constellation ES.2 drives. The Windows box is running Windows 10 Pro. The Linux machine is a laptop running Debian Testing. All three devices are connected to an unmanaged gigabit switch. The test file is a DVD iso file.
I can't think of anything that would cause this. No wifi, no powerline, no small files, no encryption, no VLANs, etc. The fact that one protocol on each machine operates at normal speeds indicates that it's not a network issue, but more of a protocol issue. I'm not really sure what I should check or change to resolve that.
I wanted to keep this short and to the point. I can go in plenty more detail. Just tell me what you need to know or what commands I should run.
The environment is fairly simple, I don't have anything crazy going on. The FreeNAS box is a HP Microserver Gen 8. 12 GB (ECC) RAM, 4x 3TB Seagate Constellation ES.2 drives. The Windows box is running Windows 10 Pro. The Linux machine is a laptop running Debian Testing. All three devices are connected to an unmanaged gigabit switch. The test file is a DVD iso file.
I can't think of anything that would cause this. No wifi, no powerline, no small files, no encryption, no VLANs, etc. The fact that one protocol on each machine operates at normal speeds indicates that it's not a network issue, but more of a protocol issue. I'm not really sure what I should check or change to resolve that.
I wanted to keep this short and to the point. I can go in plenty more detail. Just tell me what you need to know or what commands I should run.