Hello, I have been experimenting with Samba's performance and I have found out few things. First of all, my samba server is FreeBSD 4.0-current running Samba 2.0.6. When performing tests, I'd transfer 700mb binary files from my samba share to a windows machine and back. Relevant performance tweaks in my smb.conf are as follows: socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY read raw = yes write raw = no max xmit = 65536 read size = 16384 oplocks = false level2 oplocks = true read prediction = True locking = true When setting "red raw" to "NO" I would be able to download (BSD->Windows) a 700mb file in 3minutes, 30seconds. Upload would take 6minutes! Setting "read raw" to "YES" would give fast write access (Windows->BSD) uploads around 3minutes, 40seconds, while reads would be extremely slow (7-8minutes!). I have tried disabling oplocks/level2, turning off/on read prediction, setting write raw to "YES" and without any luck I cannot get the same read/write access from my Samba share. I believe this is a problem on the Samba end, as I have also tried transferring same file via ftp and down/upload was around 220seconds which sounds about right. Any suggestions, comments would be greatly appreciated. Richard ----- Richard Furda PGP public key: http://www.best.ca/rfurda.pkr