On 1/18/2003 2:27 PM, Terry Lambert wrote:
Both uplink and downlink bandwidths are nowhere near saturation - it's the underlying RPC that make NFS inherently slow over WAN links.Lars Eggert wrote:I've tried NFS mounting ISI servers at home over PPTP over a cable modem connection, and it's painfully slow - much slower than the bandwidth of the cable pipe. NFS isn't well tuned for high-RTT environments (in my case, 20ms).The up-channel speed on a cable modem is usually in the neighborhood of 1.5 times the amount of bandwidth needed for just the ACKs for the data coming down the down-channel; that leaves very little bandwidth left over for NFS requests to the server, particularly if there are a lot of data transfers taking place from the server to the client (client reads). If you are doing any level of data transfers from the client to the server (client writes), you should expect your performance to go to hell.
Lars
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Lars Eggert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> USC Information Sciences Institute
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