Displaying 20 results from an estimated 500 matches similar to: "New HPN Patch Released"
2009 Feb 08
1
rsync oldest files first
Hello -
Running rsync v3.0.5 on a mixture of CentOS 4.6 and 5.1 systems,
using hpnssh as the transport mechanism.
I am using rsync to replicate roughly a TB worth of compressed log
data per day from a bunch of systems for processing.
Every hour the systems generate log files, compress them and then
rsync pushes them out to a centralized set of redundant hosts
with their storage connected to a
2017 Feb 14
3
[Bug 2676] New: error while starting sshd daemon
https://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2676
Bug ID: 2676
Summary: error while starting sshd daemon
Product: Portable OpenSSH
Version: 7.2p2
Hardware: Other
OS: Linux
Status: NEW
Severity: critical
Priority: P5
Component: sshd
Assignee: unassigned-bugs at mindrot.org
2006 Mar 16
0
New Version of HPN-SSH Patch
[NB: General information regarding HPN-SSH can be found at
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh ]
This is a beta release of HPN12 but I'd like to get some user
experiences with it if anyone is so inclined. This version of the HPN
patch more closely conforms to the openssh nomenclature and coding
style, it eliminates the use of command line switches in favor of -o
options, it
2007 Nov 09
1
HPN SSH
Hello,
I know that this has been asked before, just wanted to mention that I,
too, would like to see the HPN SSH functionality incorporated in the
standard OpenSSH.
Would there be technical disadvantages integrating the changes?
I know we are all pretty busy, but I would certainly spend time to help,
e.g. with testing, documentation, etc.
Cheers
--pwo
--
Peter W. Osel - http://pwo.de/ - pwo
2009 Feb 17
1
Support for merging LPK and hpn-ssh into mainline openssh?
Hello
Are there plans to merge the hpn-ssh
(http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/) and the LPK
(http://code.google.com/p/openssh-lpk/) into the mainline openssh.
Adding lpk has been logged as a bug in bugzilla as
They are two patches that I always apply as the performance boost from
hpn-ssh is substantial to say the least, and centralisation of the
authorized_keys into a LDAP server
2007 May 07
1
HPN SSH
Hello,
I know this has come up before; but is the HPN patch (or elements thereof)
currently being considered for integration in to the OpenSSH code base? Are
there pending issues (buffer management, none cipher, etc) which still need
to be addressed?
We have been using HPN-SSH for over a year now, and like others, have
observed significant performance improvement over standard OpenSSH. I can
2005 Sep 08
1
HPN Patch for OpenSSH 4.2p1 Available
Howdy,
As a note, we now have HPN patch for OpenSSH 4.2 at
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
Its still part of the last set of patches (HPN11) so there aren't any
additional changes in the code. It patches, configures, compiles, and
passes make tests without a problem. I've not done extensive testing for
this version of openssh but I don't foresee any problems.
I
2006 Mar 25
1
High Performance SSH/SCP - HPN-SSH when?
Hi,
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
Clearly, the HPN patches significantly boost throughput performance.
This enhancement is entirely from tuning the SSH buffer sizes.
Alex Tavcar
2005 Mar 25
1
New HPN patch released for 3.9
We've released a new HPN (High Performance Network) patch for OpenSSH
3.9p1. We've made two major changes - first off we backed out of all
the modifications we made to buffer.c. Turns out that it just wasn't
necessary once we fixed a nagging bug in channels.c. I also made a
minor change to the buffer sizes in the source and sink functions in
scp.c Increasing the size of both
2006 Apr 26
1
Prelim results: hpnssh v ssh in local area networks
The results, for anyone interested, can be found here
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/results.html
Long story short, there doesn't seem to be any notable difference
between the two anymore. I still have a few more test combinations to
run (<.5ms rtts and against cygwin) so the conclusions might change but,
at this point, I'm no longer seeing any sort of performance
2007 Aug 21
1
High Performance SSH/SCP - HPN-SSH
Dear CentOS lovers,
Could you consider to include a patch,
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
for openssh maybe as CentosPlus packages?
It has great speed impact for long-distance ( high delay ) transfer.
Regards,
Yuji Tsuchimoto
2005 Jul 28
1
People using the HPN patch...
If anyone is using the HPN patch on a high performance link I was
wondering if you could take a moment to answer a quick question
Are you seeing vastly different performance between scp throughput and
sftp throughput? On my test network (pittsburgh to chicago) I'm getting
26MB/s with scp (arcfour) and only 6.4MB/s with sftp (arcfour). We just
started looking into this but it woudl be nice
2011 Feb 06
3
OpenSSH could be faster...then why don't they path it??
https://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/hpn-v-ssh-tput.jpg
"SCP and the underlying SSH2 protocol implementation in OpenSSH is network performance limited by statically defined internal flow control buffers. These buffers often end up acting as a bottleneck for network throughput of SCP, especially on long and high bandwith network links. Modifying the ssh code to allow the buffers
2006 Feb 01
0
HPN patch for OpenSSH 4.3 released
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh
There have been some changes to the command line switches which are
detailed on the website. This is more of a stop gap release than
anything else. This is still in the HPN-11 cycle of patches. We hope to
have an update to HPN-12 out sometime in March (when I can get some
freetime). This will conform more closely to the OpenSSH nomenclature
and
2005 Jun 17
3
New Set of High Performance Networking Patches Available
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
Mike Stevens and I just released a new set of high performance
networking patches for OpenSSH 3.9p1, 4.0p1, and 4.1p1. These patches
will provide the same set of functionality across all 3 revisions. New
functionality includes
1) HPN performance even without both sides of the connection being HPN
enabled. As long as the bulk data flow is in the
2007 Mar 12
0
HPN patch now available for OpenSSH 4.6
The HPN patch set has been updated to work with OpenSSH4.6. This patch
can help improve performance of bulk data transfers when using SSH, SCP,
or SFTP. Please see http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh
for more information.
The patch is available from the above address or directly with
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/openssh-4.6p1-hpn12v16.diff.gz
If you have any
2006 Sep 29
0
HPN-SSH for OpenSSH 4.4p1 Available
This is a preliminary release and as such should be used at your own
risk. In my testing the application builds under OS X and Linux, passes
the regression tests, and file transfer tests on our test connections
exhibited a 1600% increase in performance
(1.4MB/s versus 20.9MB/s 46ms RTT).
This patch (hpn12v10) is available from
2006 Nov 14
0
HPN Patch for 4.5p1 Released
Just so you know the HPN-SSH patch for 4.5p1 has been released at
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh
The 4.4p1 patch also works against 4.5p1. The 4.5p1 patch just addresses
some line moves for a cleaner patch.
2007 Sep 05
0
HPN Patch for OpenSSH 4.7 Available
The HPN-SSH patch set for OpenSSH 4.7 is now available from
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/openssh-4.7p1-hpn12v18.diff.gz
Its passes all regression tests and my personal sets of tests. We do not
introduce any new functionality. However, I expect this is an interim
release. I hope to have some relatively minor modification available in
the next month. These will mostly deal
2008 Apr 01
0
HPN-SSH for OpenSSH 4.9 Available
HPN-SSH is a set of high performance patches which add dynamic window
sizing, none cipher switching, enhanced server logging, and a
multi-threaded cipher implementation to OpenSSH. We've just updated the
patches to the OpenSSH 4.9 release and made them available from
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/
Comments, questions, and criticisms are always welcome.
Thanks for your