Am 2006-04-27 14:15:10, schrieb Ken Walker:
>
> smbmount //other_machines_IP_or_name/share_name /mnt/c -o
> lfs,username=blah,password=blah
>
> the lfs in the middle gives samba Large File Support. I couldn't copy
> anything bigger than 2Gig without it
...or use scp
> Ken
Greetings
Michell
TED] Behalf Of Chris Howie
> Sent: 29 March 2006 9:55pm
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: copying a 12GB file
>
>
> I missed the first message, so I'm quoting from a quote:
>
> > Am 2006-03-01 17:18:43, schrieb .:
> >
> >>Hi,
&
I missed the first message, so I'm quoting from a quote:
> Am 2006-03-01 17:18:43, schrieb .:
>
>>Hi,
>>
>>how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
>>connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
>>or my workstation) without going to leng
Michael Gregg wrote:
I very well may be a problem with NFS itself, and I'd like to know what
it is if you ever figure out the problem.
I'm sorry, but I'm probably not very helpful with that. I just installed
an ftp server to copy the file which went flawless at work. My setup at
home involv
I very well may be a problem with NFS itself, and I'd like to know what
it is if you ever figure out the problem.
Have you tried directly connecting together the two machines that are
having problems?
Have you done tcpdumps on the links that the machines exist on? Are you
getting any collision
Michael Gregg wrote:
After a lot of investigation it turned out to be a interaction problem
between a very large and old cisco switch and a router(aslo cisco).
Thanks for the info!
Both machines are connected to a new 24 Port 10/100/1000 Switch, so that
shouldn't give problems --- actually a
I've had this same problems here with a machine that's on a segmented
network here. Where I would get these I/O Errors when I use nfs in async
mode.
After a lot of investigation it turned out to be a interaction problem
between a very large and old cisco switch and a router(aslo cisco).
It turn
Michelle Konzack wrote:
You should correct your NFS-Setup!
Yeah, I tried, but async mode fails.
GH
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Am 2006-03-10 13:36:35, schrieb .:
> Sinan Nalkaya wrote:
> >if the server is debian, the nfs daemon provided by nfs-kernel-server
> >packet should do fine, i wrote and read 40 gb daha to nfs server without
> >any problem, didnt measure the time/speed.
>
> The server I wanted to to copy the file f
Am 2006-03-01 17:18:43, schrieb .:
>
> Hi,
>
> how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
> connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
> or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
> server or the like on the mail
Mike McCarty wrote:
Is splitting the file up into pieces, and doing MD5 and SHA1 sums
on the pieces out of the question?
Well, I thought of that, but I would have had to use pieces smaller
than 2 GB. The way to split it would have been using something like
mimeconstruct and send it by mail, li
Sinan Nalkaya wrote:
if the server is debian, the nfs daemon provided by nfs-kernel-server
packet should do fine, i wrote and read 40 gb daha to nfs server without
any problem, didnt measure the time/speed.
The server I wanted to to copy the file from is running Debian Woody,
kernel 2.4.20. The
Josh Battles wrote:
I regularly transfer ~9GB files across my [100mbit] network from a Sarge
server to any number of Linux workstations as well as a Windows MCE set top
box. Everything is stored on Samba shares using CIFS. I've never gotten any
errors and my transfer times are usually very rea
Neil Dugan wrote:
If you really want to know how fast the transfer was, you could copy
again but pipe the file to /dev/null instead of putting it on a disk.
Yeah, but as long as the speed is reasonably with the expectable limits,
it's ok. I only wanted to get the file copied because I needed i
Patrick Ouellette wrote:
Have you thought about netcat?
No, never heard of that before :)
GH
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
if the server is debian, the nfs daemon provided by nfs-kernel-server
packet should do fine, i wrote and read 40 gb daha to nfs server without
any problem, didnt measure the time/speed.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTEC
On Wed, March 1, 2006 11:04 am, Mike McCarty wrote:
> . wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server or
my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP server o
. wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
> connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
> or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
> server or the like on the mailserver?
>
> File size limit
. wrote:
. wrote:
how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
Thanks for your input! :)
I've installed wu-ftpd on the workstation rather than on the mailserver
(I should have thought earlier of that!), and it was easy and worked
flawless except that the ftp cli
On Wed, 01 Mar 2006 16:20:25 +0100, . wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
> connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
> or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
> server or the like
On Wed, Mar 01, 2006 at 05:57:57PM +0100, . wrote:
> Date: Wed, 01 Mar 2006 17:57:57 +0100
> From: "." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: copying a 12GB file
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
>
> . wrote:
>
> >how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable
. wrote:
Hi,
how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
server or the like on the mailserver?
File size limit is 2GB with
. wrote:
how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
Thanks for your input! :)
I've installed wu-ftpd on the workstation rather than on the mailserver
(I should have thought earlier of that!), and it was easy and worked
flawless except that the ftp client doesn't
. wrote:
how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
server or the like on the mailserver?
FTP would probably be the fastest,
Yes, blowfish would be a good choice if doing this.
-Peter
On Wed, Mar 01, 2006 at 04:43:45PM +0100, Lubos Vrbka wrote:
> >FTP would probably be the fastest, but scp (file transfer over SSH) is
> >probably already on both machines if they're both Linux. PuTTY is an
> >excellent SSH/SCP client
On Wednesday 01 March 2006 09:43 am, Lubos Vrbka wrote:
> > FTP would probably be the fastest, but scp (file transfer over SSH) is
> > probably already on both machines if they're both Linux. PuTTY is an
> > excellent SSH/SCP client for Windows (and Unix) if you need cross
> > platform support.
>
FTP would probably be the fastest, but scp (file transfer over SSH) is
probably already on both machines if they're both Linux. PuTTY is an
excellent SSH/SCP client for Windows (and Unix) if you need cross
platform support.
You probably don't want to use SSH Compression as I've seen it actual
hi,
how can I copy a 12GB file at reasonable speed over a 1000Mbit ethernet
connection from one computer (mailserver) to another (SAMBA file server
or my workstation) without going to lengths like installing an FTP
server or the like on the mailserver?
maybe stupid suggestion, but... it is not
28 matches
Mail list logo