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Snap Server / NAS / Storage Technical Goodies The Home for Snap Server Hacking, Storage and NAS info. And NAS / Snap Classifides |
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08-28-2006, 11:44 AM | #101 |
Thermophile
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Plano, TX
Posts: 3,135
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Re: Snap 705N/4100 lives and thrives!
The ideal way is to run a chariot run. The poor man ways is to transfer a file >100 meg and time it, then calculate the speed. Drag and drop will be lower. the a ftp transfer. If you have a lot of trafic on the lan it will be slower.
If you think you are slow verify the port is running at full duplex. From debug enter "ethernet speed" and "ethernet fullduplex"
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1 Snap 4500 - 1.0T (4 x 250gig WD2500SB RE), Raid5, 1 Snap 4500 - 1.6T (4 x 400gig Seagates), Raid5, 1 Snap 4200 - 4.0T (4 x 2gig Seagates), Raid5, Using SATA converts from Andy Link to SnapOS FAQ's http://forums.procooling.com/vbb/showthread.php?t=13820 |
08-28-2006, 01:31 PM | #102 |
Thermophile
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Yakima, WA
Posts: 1,282
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Re: Snap 705N/4100 lives and thrives!
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08-28-2006, 03:42 PM | #103 |
Cooling Savant
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: South Bend, IN
Posts: 385
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Re: Snap 705N/4100 lives and thrives!
The easiest way I have found is use a web browser to get into the snap, find a large file, right click on it and chose "save link as". IE (firefox, whatever you use) will download the file just like it would from a web page and give you the transfer rate as it does so.
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Snap Server 4100, 4x120GB Seagate Drives, RAID 5, version 3.4.803 |
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