Hi Im wondering if this is normal for samba to have such a high usage,with this type of HW and only between 150-200 users on it. I tough the SF280 would be better at this job. Anyone got similar setup i can compare to? %usr %sys %wio %idle 08:00:01 2 12 6 80 08:20:00 2 12 7 79 08:40:00 3 16 8 74 09:00:01 4 25 8 63 09:20:00 3 19 11 67 09:40:00 4 27 17 52 10:00:01 4 35 12 49 10:20:01 4 30 14 53 10:40:00 4 36 13 47 11:00:01 2 25 14 58 11:20:00 2 21 18 60 11:40:00 3 62 18 17 12:00:00 3 33 12 52 12:20:00 1 25 14 60 12:40:00 1 15 7 77 13:00:00 3 33 11 53 13:20:00 3 23 13 61 HW: SunFire 280 1x750MHz OS: Solaris 8 2/02 Network: Gigabit Ethernet Disk: Enterprise Virtual Array SAN. Network admin says the speed/latency of the network between clients and the server is good. The disks is not very busy at all. The smb.conf # Global parameters [global] workgroup = NET2 netbios name = VIKERSUND server string = Vikersund Filserver security = DOMAIN encrypt passwords = Yes password server = * log level = 3 log file = /var/adm/smblogs/log.%m deadtime = 15 preferred master = No local master = No domain master = No wins proxy = Yes wins server = 172.16.208.16 remote announce = 172.16.208.14 NIS homedir = Yes admin users = administrator create mask = 0664 directory mask = 0775 [proj_ds] comment = proj_ds path = /export/projects/proj_ds admin users = read only = No [XFR] comment = File transfer path = /export/xfr read only = No thanks Tommy Fallsen
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, 13 Feb 2003, Fallsen, Tommy wrote:> Hi > > Im wondering if this is normal for samba to have such a high usage,with > this type of HW and only between 150-200 users on it. I tough the SF280 > would be better at this job. Anyone got similar setup i can compare to?I would drop the log level to 0 to save some CPU. cheers, jerry ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Hewlett-Packard ------------------------- http://www.hp.com SAMBA Team ---------------------- http://www.samba.org GnuPG Key ---- http://www.plainjoe.org/gpg_public.asc "You can never go home again, Oatman, but I guess you can shop there." --John Cusack - "Grosse Point Blank" (1997) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://quantumlab.net/pine_privacy_guard/ iD8DBQE+S6XaIR7qMdg1EfYRAk28AJ4yT3bKKXcceFOhalxOeWPbe9WLEgCg9IVZ 7pkBo/6QDjxQHM0YCXlU1Tg=MDtQ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----