[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-users] Slow network with Win2k3, HVM and GPLPV
Olivier, in your vif statement you have "paravirtualized". "vif = [ 'type=paravirtualized, bridge=eth0' ]" Did you try it without the paravirtualized option? Shouldn't HVM domu vif statements look like this: vif = [ "mac=00:16:36:6d:e9:16,bridge=eth0"] Here another case with bad performance: On a physical w2k3 sbs server: A file copy from win xp clients to other linux machines on the same net (switch) results in 60-70 Mbyte/s. The same action with the w2k3 server as a target gave me a data rate of 8-10 Mbyte/s. The nic in the w2k3 server is an intel pro 1000 server adapter. All readings (and doings) concerning SMB Protocol issues and smb signing problems didn't solve the problem until now. Perhaps you have the same issue, only in virtual environment... Here some of the readings: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/321098/en-us http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=328890 http://support.microsoft.com/kb/321169 Another case, performance on a w2k8 sbs server (also a physical machine): After hours of analyzing network-issues I found the solution in disc configuration. Enabling the writecache of the raid-controller gave a great performance push. >From 10-12 Mbyte/s to 70-85 Mbyte/s. The bottleneck wasn't the network at all, it was the disk config! Here I found a little tool to examine disk or net throughput in windows environments: http://download.heise.de/software/d3dc048dbbbc713e5383d1757783658f/4d90b287/3582/h2testw_1.4.zip Hope I could help a little on this... Regards, Guido -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Olivier Cant Gesendet: Montag, 28. März 2011 17:38 An: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Betreff: [Xen-users] Slow network with Win2k3, HVM and GPLPV Hi, I'm having some real hard time with the gplpv driver and Windows2k3 DomU on xen 4.0 This is a xen 4 install from debian squeeze withour much changes in the configuration I've install the gplpv driver in the DomU, everything seems to work fine but I'm having slow data transfert between two windows DomU (even on the same physical host). I barely reach 100Mbps on a Gbit interface (usualy around 8 - 10 MBytes / s). I have read quite a lot on this "issue" on the list and various other sources. I have tried to disable "Checksum offload" and "Large Send Offload" in the DomU but nothing changed. By the way, this doesn't affect the Linux DomU (I get full Gbit data speed there) I'm running out of ideas, any advice would be much appreciated. Below is my DomU config file and network configuration : Cheers Olivier DomU : kernel = "/usr/lib/xen-4.0/boot/hvmloader" builder='hvm' acpi=1 apic=1 vcpus = 8 memory = 12288 shadow_memory = 8 name = "patologix" vif = [ 'type=paravirtualized, bridge=eth0' ] disk = [ 'phy:/dev/datastore1/patologix-hda,hda,w', 'phy:/dev/datastore1/patologix-hdb,hdb,w', 'phy:/dev/datastore1/patologix-hdd,hdd,w', 'phy:/dev/datastore1/patologix-hde,hde,w', # 'file:/mnt/SW_CD_Windows_Svr_Std_2003_R2_32-BIT_X64_English_ISO_x64_1_MLF_X13-73750.ISO,hdc:cdrom,r', ] device_model = '/usr/lib64/xen-4.0/bin/qemu-dm' # boot on floppy (a), hard disk (c) or CD-ROM (d) # default: hard disk, cd-rom, floppy boot="dc" vfb = [ 'type=vnc,vncdisplay=19,vncpasswd=s3cr3t,vnclisten=0.0.0.0,keymap=fr' ] #sdl=0 #vnc=1 #vncconsole=1 #vncpasswd='' stdvga=0 serial='pty' usbdevice='tablet' in my xend-config.sxp the network configuration looks like : (network-script network-bridge) and the bridge configured on the server : root@furax:~# brctl show bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces eth0 8000.0025900ce62c no peth0 vif10.0 vif12.0 vif15.0 vif17.0 vif20.0 vif3.0 vif4.0 vif6.0 vif7.0 vif8.0 vif9.0 _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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