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Re: nfs kernel booting is slow



In article <1A9C6071-D675-4340-AC01-8D3D01F2E547%must-have-coffee.gen.nz@localhost>,
Lloyd Parkes  <lloyd%must-have-coffee.gen.nz@localhost> wrote:
>
>
>> On 20/11/2017, at 1:58 PM, Michael van Elst <mlelstv%serpens.de@localhost> wrote:
>> 
>> scole_mail%gmx.com@localhost (scole_mail) writes:
>> 
>> Both seem to be slow, look at the time stamps and repeated requests
>(same xid).
>> Sure that one is a dump from a 'working' setup?
>
>
>I agree with Michael that the dump from the â??workingâ?? setup
>doesnâ??t look healthy at all.
>
>I have seen similar problems relating to NFS and a lack of flow control
>before (as paul mentioned), but these read requests all fit inside a
>single ethernet frame, so you shouldnâ??t need any flow control. You are
>only ever waiting for one packet and you really shouldnâ??t need flow
>control. 
>
>One thing I have seen is horrifyingly slow network interfaces speaking
>10base-T. I had to rate limit traffic to a SAN switchâ??s 10base-T
>management port because it simply couldnâ??t handle traffic coming in at
>10Mb/s and firmware updates via FTP were timing out. Maybe the powermac
>is half-duplex (which is reasonable for 10base-T) and it canâ??t switch
>from transmit to receive fast enough to read the reply properly (which
>is me being super speculative). Try setting your NFS serverâ??s network
>link to a slower speed, such as 10base-T just to see if that helps. 

Try mounting with rsize=1024,wsize=1024?

christos


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