@ch3i Ohhhhh ok, thanks for that, that makes sense.
So I should see peak upload speeds at 0 compression, correct?
@ch3i Ohhhhh ok, thanks for that, that makes sense.
So I should see peak upload speeds at 0 compression, correct?
@ch3i Turning up the compression kills my upload speed. CPU performance doesn’t budge though… It sits under 10% usage. That’s another issue though…
All up-to-date. I am pulling images at 7GB/min currently…
I just turned compression down to 0 and now we are uploading at 3-3.5GB/min, it peaked around 5GB/min at the start.
Anything I can do to up that speed?
It’s not crucial at this point… I was just upset about the 700-800MB/min range.
@Wayne-Workman We get 941 Mbits/sec when running a 1GB file through iperf…
Hey Guys,
Sorry for the delay, I decided to do a fresh install of Fedora on our XenServer.
Currently I am getting ~1.5GB/min upload.
I haven’t tested pulling an image as I haven’t migrated the images over.
I am going to do a throughput test like @Wayne-Workman suggested. I will update with results.
I recently virtualized our Fog system on to our XenServer Hyper-visor. We have extremely poor upload speeds when trying to upload an image. Around 700-800 MB/min. We were getting around 2-3 GB/min prior to virtualizing.
Is this just an issue with using a VM or can this be fixed?
We are running on XenServer 6.5 and the VM that fog is running on is Ubuntu 12.04
Thanks