![]() ![]() I disabled "Support DOS File Attributes" into the CIFS options and the directory browsing is now VERY FAST. I hope this could also help in solve other people's directory browsing problems :) the system is WRITING to the filesystem at 3MBytes/sec ? This test is done without any client connected to CIFS or other protocols, and zfs writings starts exactly when I type "dir" on smbclient and stops when dir is ~# zpool iostat 1 ![]() These subdirs only contains 1 to 5 files, usually large 5 to 10MB each one.īut the most weird thing is that. ![]() It's full of misinformation and half-truths at best, and is a great example of how a seemingly innocuous piece of information (a KB article detailing a valid issue in pre-SP1 Vista that was fixed in a patch and does not affect Windows 7 happened to contain a last resort option that suggested turning off TCP auto tuning if you didn't want to install the fix or try any of the other three workarounds) can be misinterpreted and propagate across the web as if it's valid (google "windows auto tuning" and almost every hit is about how to shut it off, with no more justification about why than that this KB article from 2009 suggested it as a workaround to a bug that's been fixed for years).Īnd before anybody says, "But the fixes worked for me!" I ask: Did you do them one at a time and check if the problem had gone away, so that you know exactly which fix made a difference? Did you re-enable the setting (if possible - if clearing DNS cached worked, you can't exactly force that to break again) and verify the problem came back? If not, then you don't know what the problem was, you don't know what fixed it, and while it may be gone now that doesn't mean it won't come back or you didn't break something else in the process. ![]() As long as we're pointing out things that are wrong, the sysprobs link in post #45 is pretty much wrong. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |