Hi Richard,
Richard Elling schrieb:
>
> Yes. I've got a few more columns in mind, too. Does anyone still use
> a VT100? :-)
Only when using ILOM ;)
(anyone using 72 char/line MUA, sorry to them, the following lines are longer):
Thanks for the great tool, it showed something very interesting
Richard Elling wrote:
>>
>> # ./zilstat.ksh
>> N-Bytes N-Bytes/s N-Max-Bytes/sB-Bytes B-Bytes/s B-Max-Bytes/s
>> 376720 376720 376720128614412861441286144
>> 419608 419608 419608136806413680641368064
>> 555256 555256 555256
Marion Hakanson wrote:
> The zilstat tool is very helpful, thanks!
>
> I tried it on an X4500 NFS server, while extracting a 14MB tar archive,
> both via an NFS client, and locally on the X4500 itself. Over NFS,
> said extract took ~2 minutes, and showed peaks of 4MB/sec buffer-bytes
> going throu
Jorgen Lundman wrote:
> Interesting, but what does it mean :)
>
>
> The x4500 for mail (NFS vers=3 on ufs on zpool with quotas):
>
> # ./zilstat.ksh
> N-Bytes N-Bytes/s N-Max-Bytes/sB-Bytes B-Bytes/s B-Max-Bytes/s
> 376720 376720 376720128614412861441286144
>
Interesting, but what does it mean :)
The x4500 for mail (NFS vers=3 on ufs on zpool with quotas):
# ./zilstat.ksh
N-Bytes N-Bytes/s N-Max-Bytes/sB-Bytes B-Bytes/s B-Max-Bytes/s
376720 376720 376720128614412861441286144
419608 419608 419608136
The zilstat tool is very helpful, thanks!
I tried it on an X4500 NFS server, while extracting a 14MB tar archive,
both via an NFS client, and locally on the X4500 itself. Over NFS,
said extract took ~2 minutes, and showed peaks of 4MB/sec buffer-bytes
going through the ZIL.
When run locally on t
I'm already using it. This could be really useful for my Windows
roaming-profile application of ZFS/NFS/SMB
On Fri, Jan 30, 2009 at 9:35 PM, Richard Elling
wrote:
> For those who didn't follow down the thread this afternoon,
> I have posted a tool call zilstat which will help you to answer
> the
For those who didn't follow down the thread this afternoon,
I have posted a tool call zilstat which will help you to answer
the question of whether a separate log might help your
workload. Details start here:
http://richardelling.blogspot.com/2009/01/zilstat.html
Enjoy!
-- richard
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