1.       If this is Netapp to netapp you may try ndmcopy

2.       If you need something more vendor agnostic – you may want to tar the data at the source, copy this as a single file to the remote site and untar it there. You may copy every subdirectory separately in parallel – which will also speed-up things. You may also want to tune TCP window to overcome some of the latency issues – you’d have to use something like rsync over hpn-ssh to leverage it

 

From: Arnold de Leon [mailto:a-toasters@deleons.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2013 11:37 PM
To: toasters <toasters@teaparty.net>
Subject: Re: Slow copy of a directory full of files via an NFS client across a WAN
 

I just tried NFSv2, similar results.  Same deadly embrace of request/reply which is death with a link with latency.

 

For this current test case this took over 5 minutes to copy 11MB of data in 600 files.

 

For reference

 

NFS (WAN 20ms) to NFS (WAN 20ms): 5 minutes

NFS (WAN 20 ms) to local disk:  50 seconds

Local disk to NFS (WAN 20ms ): 3 minutes 50 seconds

Local disk to local disk: 0.285 seconds

NFS (LAN 1ms) to NFS (LAN 1ms):  5 seconds

 

[I see that Peter also added data.  This is a bit of throwback for me, I've been around long enough to deal with the fun Usenet spool directories and joys of lots of small files]

 

The irony here is all I want is to make a copy of a directory which would be a trivial operation on the filer itself, I just need another reference to the directory.  The filer can make the copy when data is modified.  I'm wondering if I can do this with the OnTap API (I don't know about the APIs yet).  The other possible work around is using a host that is on the same LAN as the filer to do the copies.  I just can't believe that there isn't a simple solution to this.

 

Thanks everyone for the ideas and information.

 

 arnold

 

 

 

 

On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 2:28 PM, Mike Horwath <drechsau@gmail.com> wrote:

Do you require NFSv3?

Why not try NFSv2 - that will bypass the multitude of *ATTR calls going on a bit and may be better.

Only testing will tell, of course.

 

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