With your error-message; Seems like a timeout after XX minutes.
Have you tried to use the heartbeat options? That will probably resolve
that issue.
About speed, it can depend on many items. For example, is the 40Mbps for
the office for upload? QoS can be implemented in many ways, some of them
rese
I ran another iperf test that gives me better numbers, it is as follows
justin@ubuntu:/etc/bacula$ iperf -c xxx.xxx.xx.xxx -p 9102 -i 2 -t 60
Client connecting to xxx.xxx.xx.xxx, TCP port 9102
TCP window size: 22.8 KByte (default)
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Even more info is needed... db backend used, Number of files in backup
job, clientfilesystem type & memory config, bacula director hardware
etc.
Cheers, Uwe
I'm not sure on the DB backend, I'm a bit of a newbie with this stuff.
The number of files being backed up looks to be about 82k, to
On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 05:56:42PM -0800, bradbpw wrote:
> More info. I ran a iperf test, it seems oddly high, there is no way these
> can be the actual transfer rates, right?
>
>
> brad@home-server:~$ iperf -c 63.227.74.80 -p 9102 -f Kbytes -i 1 -t 10
Even more info is needed... db backend us
More info. I ran a iperf test, it seems oddly high, there is no way these can
be the actual transfer rates, right?
brad@home-server:~$ iperf -c 63.227.74.80 -p 9102 -f Kbytes -i 1 -t 10
Client connecting to xx.xxx.xx.xx, TCP port 9102
Oops, misread my transfer rate, it's 500 kb/s. Still way too slow.
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I have painfully slow transfer rates on my Bacula set up, like around 500
bytes/s. I am backing up a client computer in my office to the server at my
house. The house has 12mb/s internet, office has 40mb/s.
Is there anyway to increase this?
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