Its def disk IO on the client OR disk/database io on the bacula director.
Its all a symptom of too much VM on not enough hardware.
Jeff.
> On Oct 30, 2014, at 2:26 PM, John Lockard wrote:
>
> Yes, but which IO?
>
> Disk IO on the client?
> Network IO from the client to the network?
> Network
Yes, but which IO?
Disk IO on the client?
Network IO from the client to the network?
Network IO from the network to the Bacula Director?
Network IO from the Bacula Director to the Bacula SD?
Disk IO on the Bacula SD?
Database IO on the Bacula Director?
Seems like you have more work to do than ju
>>
> Just be aware that you might not see a dramatic increase in speed just
> moving Bacula itself!
>
> If you are using VMWare with VMDK files on a VMFS volume you need to be
> aware that any IO by a guest requires a reservation of the entire VMFS
> volume. Locking is happening at the SCSI l
On 14-10-30 08:27 AM, Jeff MacDonald wrote:
>> On Oct 30, 2014, at 12:17 PM, Bryn Hughes wrote:
>> The job report rate will be the final average rate of the job, it doesn't
>> know/specify the difference between the 'input' rate and the 'output' rate.
>>
>> Yep, you're going to need to do some in
> On Oct 30, 2014, at 12:36 PM, John Drescher wrote:
>
>> Making a stronger and stronger arguement for me to recommend dedicated
>> bacula appliance. 16 gigs of ram, 4 cores. 1tb of 7200 for postgres and a
>> tape drive :)
>
> Maybe an enterprise ssd for postgres.
>
> John
Agreed, they’re n
> Making a stronger and stronger arguement for me to recommend dedicated bacula
> appliance. 16 gigs of ram, 4 cores. 1tb of 7200 for postgres and a tape drive
> :)
Maybe an enterprise ssd for postgres.
John
--
___
> On Oct 30, 2014, at 12:17 PM, Bryn Hughes wrote:
> The job report rate will be the final average rate of the job, it doesn't
> know/specify the difference between the 'input' rate and the 'output' rate.
>
> Yep, you're going to need to do some investigation on the storage side of the
> VM ma
On 14-10-30 07:50 AM, Jeff MacDonald wrote:
Tips/Suggestions?
Jeff.
What is the content of your backups? Some things (ie thousands of tiny
files) will cause a lot of seeks on the machine to be backed up. If you
aren't using attribute spooling then each backed up file also causes a
record t
>>
>>
>> Tips/Suggestions?
>>
>> Jeff.
>>
> What is the content of your backups? Some things (ie thousands of tiny
> files) will cause a lot of seeks on the machine to be backed up. If you
> aren't using attribute spooling then each backed up file also causes a
> record to be inserted in t
On 14-10-30 06:27 AM, Jeff MacDonald wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some backups going at 2MB/s which for a 380gig backup is just too
> slow. I’m trying to find my bottleneck.
>
> Some questions:
>
> - Is the rate of the backup only shown in “messages” or is it stored in the
> db anywhere. Or could I ju
On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 9:27 AM, Jeff MacDonald wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some backups going at 2MB/s which for a 380gig backup is just too
> slow. I’m trying to find my bottleneck.
>
> Some questions:
>
> - Is the rate of the backup only shown in “messages” or is it stored in the
> db anywhere. O
Hi,
I have some backups going at 2MB/s which for a 380gig backup is just too slow.
I’m trying to find my bottleneck.
Some questions:
- Is the rate of the backup only shown in “messages” or is it stored in the db
anywhere. Or could I just do jobbytes / endtime-starttime in the jobs table?
- Do
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