Yep, will post results when I get them together
From: Hadrian Baron
[mailto:Hadrian.Baron@vegas.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 8:29 AM
To: Sto RageC ; Langdon, Laughlin T. (Lock)
Cc: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: RE: CIFS overhead with Netapp Filers / TCP Window size settings
I'd like to see what SIO produces as well.
One Q regarding TCP Window size:
c. Use '65340' for Windows 2000 only environments.
So if all CIFS clients are Win2k server, Win2k3 server, or NT / XP,
then turning this up will have no detrimental effects? Seems to me the
answer is the typical one - it depends.
Thanks for any input
Hadrian
Baron
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com
[mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com] On Behalf Of Sto Rage©
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 10:59 AM
To: Langdon, Laughlin T. (Lock)
Cc: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: Re: CIFS overhead with Netapp Filers
Have you tried to use the SIO
tool to see what kind of results that produces against both windows server and
the filer?
http://now.netapp.com/NOW/download/tools/sio_ntap/download.shtml
(needs NOW account)
-G
On 3/29/07, Langdon, Laughlin T.
(Lock) <Langdon.Lock@mayo.edu>
wrote:
in my previous posts I point out that this is an empty
filer. Not in prod yet. So I'm the only one doing anything on it
From: Ganjihal, Chetan
[mailto:Chetan.Ganjihal@netapp.com]
Sent: Wed 3/28/2007 10:40 PM
To: Shane Garoutte; Langdon, Laughlin T. (Lock)
Cc: Glenn Walker; toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: RE: CIFS overhead
with Netapp Filers
I think it would be important to know the state of the
system(filer), the values set for different options, system utilization etc.
If there is a perfstat output with stats gathered during the
operation(file copy) being carried out, it will help understand the
problem.
cheers
Chetan
From: Shane Garoutte [mailto:sgaroutte@gmail.com ]
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 12:59 AM
To: Langdon, Laughlin T. ((Lock))
Cc: Glenn Walker; toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: Re: CIFS overhead with Netapp Filers
A quick crawl on NOW provided the following:
if CIFS performance is slow after investigating performance
issues, modify the filer's CIFS negotiated buffer size.
1. Verify that hardware or software problems do
not exist within the filer, network and client.
2. Record the CIFS negotiated buffer size by
capturing the output of the filer command:
options cifs.neg_buf_size
3. Enter the following filer commands:
a. cifs terminate
b. options cifs.neg_buf_size 16644
c. cifs restart
4. If the buffer size in step 3b does not
improve performance, try the following buffer sizes:
a. Use '17424'.
Note:
Starting with Data ONTAP 6.0.X, allow
the buffer size to exceed 17424; therefore, upgrade to a release that fixes bug
33396 only if performance does not improve.
b. Use '33472' for environments mixed
with Windows NT and Windows 2000.
c. Use '65340' for Windows 2000 only
environments.
5. If performance remains slow:
a. Re-confirm that hardware or software
problems do not exist within the filer, network and client.
b. Restore the original CIFS negotiated
buffer size (refer to steps 2 and 3).
c. During a performance interruption,
capture a packet trace between the filer and Windows client.
d. Send the packet trace to Network
Appliance Technical Support for analysis.
On Mar 28, 2007, at 8:33 AM, Langdon, Laughlin T. ((Lock))
wrote:
I'm
doing a straight drag and drop using UNC paths with a single 1.5gig zip
file and a 2.2Gig binary File. If I add more streams (aka start more than
one copy on more than one server the filer happily provides more bandwidth)
From
Windows server to windows server I get 500 Mbps
From
Windows server to a Netapp 6030 Filer running DOT 7.2.1 I get about 250 Mbps
I've
tried TCP windows size, Flow Control, LCAP, Static Link Aggregation, Singe port
on the filer (no vif), straight crossover cable.
From: Glenn Walker [mailto:ggwalker@mindspring.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 5:15 PM
To: Langdon, Laughlin T. (Lock); toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: RE: CIFS overhead with Netapp Filers
Typically,
you shouldn't see any performance decrease – rather, you should get better
performance.
Are
you seeing some sort of decrease?
What
I can point out: with some things (Excel\Word to be specific), MS will
implement stuff that's not really documented for the file open\discovery which
can cause problems, but I doubt that's what you are running into given the
speed you are speaking of. Likewise, using Windows NLB (LB not HA)
doesn't always go very well given the fact that it's not the best technology
and sometimes can display interop problems with other vendors (not just
NetApp).
What
exactly are you doing for your test?
Glenn
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com
[
mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com] On Behalf Of Langdon, Laughlin
T. (Lock)
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 2:33 PM
To: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: CIFS overhead with Netapp Filers
I
was wondering what the CIFS overhead for a NetApp filer would be.
Let's
say for instance a Windows Server to Windows Server transfer on the same
switch, same subnet, GIG copper interconnects, no TOE card, etc gets me up to
about 50% utilization (500Mbps).
Should
that same server to a Netapp Filer see a 20-30% degradation in TX/RX speeds
because of CIFS overhead?
What
should I expect for data rates in this type of scenario? Are there any
tweaks anyone knows of to decrease this gap?
(same
results using static link aggregation, and LACP for the VIF)
Thanks
Lock