On 04/12/12 09:51 AM, Peter Jeremy wrote:
On 2012-Apr-11 18:34:42 +1000, Ian Collins wrote:
I use an application with a fairly large receive data buffer (256MB) to
replicate data between sites.
I have noticed the buffer becoming completely full when receiving
snapshots for some filesystems, ev
On 04/12/12 09:00 AM, Jim Klimov wrote:
2012-04-11 23:55, Ian Collins wrote:
Odd. The pool is a single iSCSI volume exported from a 7320 and there is
18TB free.
Lame question: is that 18Tb free on the pool inside the
iSCSI volume, or on the backing pool on 7320?
I mean that as far as the "exte
On 2012-Apr-11 18:34:42 +1000, Ian Collins wrote:
>I use an application with a fairly large receive data buffer (256MB) to
>replicate data between sites.
>
>I have noticed the buffer becoming completely full when receiving
>snapshots for some filesystems, even over a slow (~2MB/sec) WAN
>connec
On 04/12/12 04:17 AM, Richard Elling wrote:
On Apr 11, 2012, at 1:34 AM, Ian Collins wrote:
I use an application with a fairly large receive data buffer (256MB)
to replicate data between sites.
I have noticed the buffer becoming completely full when receiving
snapshots for some filesystems,
On Apr 11, 2012, at 1:34 AM, Ian Collins wrote:
> I use an application with a fairly large receive data buffer (256MB) to
> replicate data between sites.
>
> I have noticed the buffer becoming completely full when receiving snapshots
> for some filesystems, even over a slow (~2MB/sec) WAN conne
I use an application with a fairly large receive data buffer (256MB) to
replicate data between sites.
I have noticed the buffer becoming completely full when receiving
snapshots for some filesystems, even over a slow (~2MB/sec) WAN
connection. I assume this is due to the changes being widely