Dear lists, I've been spending a LOT of time trying to find out where's the problem, but can't find it and therefore seek urgent help now. We have the following system:
Server with VMware server -> VM running a webserver and netatalk -> 2 other VMs not related The VM with netatalk was SUSE 10.0 with kernel 2.6.13-15.15-smp (from SUSE), and things were pretty fun and quick. Then we upgraded to SUSE 10.2 and now 10.3, where everything EXCEPT netatalk runs perfect. Since this upgrade, Apple clients (MacOS X) now do READ very very slowly (about 512KB/s over the gigabit LAN), while writing to the server still is normal (>20MB/s). I've even retried with the newest kernel 2.6.23.13, tried different /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_congestion_control (cubic, reno, bic, etc.) and nothing helps. I've then tried to install Samba and found that we have similar problems reading with it from MacOS clients. Now I'm pretty sure it should be something with the linux kernel, but I don't understand what. Here are the wireshark dumps in pcap format: http://zmi.at/x/atalk-write-fast.pcap -> you can see writing to the server (192.168.120.9) is normal and fast http://zmi.at/x/atalk-read-slow.pcap -> reading is horribly slow. Lots of "unknown", because of netatalk or what? http://zmi.at/x/unknown-atalk.pcap -> another dump while reading, you see "unknown" reads. I'm not sure if it's just wireshark not understanding the packets or netatalk. And trying with samba: http://zmi.at/x/smb-read-slow.pcap http://zmi.at/x/smb-write-quick.pcap you can see that it's also slow. Now why did it work with the old 2.6.13 kernel? I still have that old VM, and when I start it, it is always perfectly fast. Only newer versions are slow. Can somebody give me a hint please? mfg zmi -- // Michael Monnerie, Ing.BSc ----- http://it-management.at // Tel: 0676/846 914 666 .network.your.ideas. // PGP Key: "curl -s http://zmi.at/zmi.asc | gpg --import" // Fingerprint: AC19 F9D5 36ED CD8A EF38 500E CE14 91F7 1C12 09B4 // Keyserver: www.keyserver.net Key-ID: 1C1209B4
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.