I meant the number of NFS thread CAN help. And yes, generally, async gives better performance than "sync" See if your clients are showing state "D" in top for your nfs client process. Check for iowait states in iostat. > What kind of local(on the box themselves) read/write speeds are you > observing. > What is the specs on your server: memory, # cpus, cpu speeds, any raid? > What kind of remote access read/write are your observing? Try doing a dd > or something to get a ball park idea. > > To first order in NFS performance tuning: > 1. rsize,wsize are the most important. Generally for linux this is 32k. > 2. The number of nfsd threads can't help also. > > but this is after you have obtain some numbers for your performce(like > also "top" and/or iostat when your server seems real slow and when your > performance is good...you have to quantify your observations to really get > meaningful help. > > ~Lawrence > >> Greetings all- >> >> I have a CentOS 5 (Final) system that is serving up content to several >> other hosts via NFS. The amount of data transferred is rather small as >> most of the files are under 100kb and each export has maybe 100 files >> that >> are accessed regularly. I'm finding that as I add more hosts accessing >> the >> NFS server, the performance seems to be getting poorer. There are >> obvious >> delays when doing simple 'ls' on an NFS mounted directory. >> >> The mounts are all done on the local LAN (100mbit FDX), all on the same >> broadcast domain, no routing. One of the clients is a physical CentOS 5 >> node, the rest (5-6 total) are OpenVZ containers also running CentOS 5. >> The NFS server is a Dell PE2950 loaded with 7.2K SATA drives. While the >> disks aren't exactly performance grade, the bottleneck does not seem to >> be >> the disks as access on the NFS server itself is 'normal'. >> >> Here are the items I've found so far that are told to increase >> performance. Since this is a production system, I have yet to try these: >> >> 1. Increase the number of instances of NFS running. (As found in >> /etc/sysconfig/nfs) >> 2. Try sync vs async behavior in mount parameters on clients >> 3. rmem_default and wmem_default parameters >> 4. rsize and wsize parameters (Dependent on MTU. Currently, mine is >> default at 1500) >> >> These are the items I'm planning to try but before I dive in (especially >> during a late night maintenance period...), I was hoping the list >> members >> brighter than me could give some comments on the above items and/or >> suggest some other things I might try. >> >> Thank you! >> >> --Tim >> _______________________________________________ >> CentOS mailing list >> CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx >> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >> > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos