On Thu, Oct 27, 2005 at 07:27:09PM +0200, Anban Mestry wrote: > rsync -avtz --no-whole-file \test1\ \mnt\test2\
You don't want to do that, because --no-whole-file optimizes rsync's socket I/O at the expense of disk I/O, which means that you're making things less efficient when the "connection" between the sender and the receiver is a local pipe. The use of -z for a "local" copy is also wasteful because you're using CPU to optimize the transfer of data over a connection that is faster than the disk I/O, even when uncompressed. Your best configuration is to avoid updating via NFS and instead connect to the NFS server directly so that rsync can update the files on a local disk. That allows rsync to optimize the network traffic. rsync -avtz /test1/ remoteNFShost:/test2/ If that is not possible, the method that uses the least disk I/O for a local copy is --whole-file and (to a much smaller extent) --inplace. That still writes out the entire file over NFS for each update, though, but it does at least avoid having rsync do a full-file read followed by a full-file write (which is what occurs with --no-whole-file). ..wayne.. -- To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html