On Wednesday, Sep 24, 2003, at 07:43 Australia/Sydney, Kamp, Bruce wrote:
I don't the exactly what MTU means.... Basicly it is the packet size. We found this out after my network guys ran Sniffer on our network. The difference in restore tmes was 2-3 days to about 10-12 hours! Your network people should be able to give a better definition! I colocated my tapepool after my first big reatore.
MTU = Maximum Transmission Unit. Yes, basically it is the packet size on the wire. For normal ethernet, it has to be 1500 bytes. There is a concept known as "jumbo frames" that is supported on some gig-e infrastructure where this can be increased; not sure about 100 Mbit ethernet though.
Instead, I'd be looking at the TCP window size. Our clients (no Netware) vary between 16 KB and 1.5 MB, depending on OS, age, backup types, etc.
Cheers, -- Paul Ripke Unix/OpenVMS/TSM/DBA I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by. -- Douglas Adams
