- #Gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs windows 10#
- #Gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs code#
This option is used when the bandwidth between the source and target machines is Not used and the whole file is sent as-is instead. Notes: Whole File removed (from MAN: With this option the incremental rsync algorithm is Test 4: rsync -rltDv -delete /mnt/freenas/media/ /mnt/storage/media/ 8:00 to 8:08 Test 3: rsync -vrltDzW -delete /mnt/freenas/media/ /mnt/storage/media/ 7:40 to 7:45 Test 2: rsync -rltDzvW -delete -stats /mnt/freenas/media/ /mnt/storage/media/ 7:40 to 7:45 That accounts for the spike up to 4 Gb/s. Notes: This is the only test that made use of the SSD Caching on the array.
![gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs](https://leogolas.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/1626246671_maxresdefault-1024x576.jpg)
Thanks guys, now I have a ton of scripts to modify. Seems rsync -rltDvW -delete gives the most constant throughput. I did testing with some various senarios and the results are below. mnt/x299prime/Backups/FreeNAS/ is mounted with NFS in and you guys nailed it.
#Gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs code#
If the method returned a exit code that I could notate that would be a positive.Īctual line in my scrip: /usr/bin/rsync -rltDzvW -delete -stats /mnt/freenas/backup/freenas/ /mnt/x299prime/Backups/FreeNAS/ -log-file=$strLogFile I just need to embed this in my existing bash script to run on a nightly basis. I need it to remove files on the VM that have been removed on the FreeNAS - this is the hangup that keeps CP from being a valid solution. I'd like to think I can maintain 2-3 Gb/s. What I need: a method to copy updated and new data from the FreeNAS to the backup pool on the ubuntu VM that takes advantage of the network speed and hardware.
#Gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs windows 10#
![gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs gpodder freenas jail mounted storage to cifs](https://i.redd.it/zyqxdrkdjn061.png)
W sped it up a little, but still nowhere close to NFS/CIFS I AM using both the -z and the -W flags in rsync. I have a windows box setup that I can duplicate this issue one too. When I use CP over a mounted NFS or CIFS share on the same directory and data, I'll see 3-4 Gb/s. When I do this with rsync, I see about 200 Mb/s (yes, Mb, NOT MB). I want to backup that data to a Ubuntu server on a ESXi 6.5 VM on a nightly basis. The short story is that I have a physical FreeNAS server with about 13 TB of data on it (5GB to 15GB chunks).