shackrock
Explorer
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2011
- Messages
- 95
I just upgraded via the GUI from 8.3.1. 64-bit Version. I also performed the zpool upgrade with no issues.
Here's some base specs:
Build FreeNAS-9.1.1-RELEASE-x64 (a752d35)
Platform Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU 540 @ 3.07GHz
Memory 4003MB
Supermicro X8SIL-F
Intel Core i3-530 CPU
Kingston 2 x 2GB ECC Unbuffered DDR3 1333 RAM
Corsair 650TX PSU
I have a 14.1TB RAID-Z1 array. It's 2 ZPools total.
Before this upgrade, transfer speeds using CIFS from my laptop to the server (pure gigabit network, nothing else is allowed on it, all wired) - were between 30-70MBps depending on what else was happening. Now, with nothing else going on, Windows literally times out on most transfers. Sometimes it will linger around 10kBps for a few minutes before saying "check your network connection..."
Any ideas what happened here? I'm happy to post any logs as required. Just let me know how to get to them.
Thanks all.
Update: Just restarted the server again, still no change. Now it takes around 4 minutes to open a folder that resides on FreeNAS (used to be <1 second).
Here's some base specs:
Build FreeNAS-9.1.1-RELEASE-x64 (a752d35)
Platform Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU 540 @ 3.07GHz
Memory 4003MB
Supermicro X8SIL-F
Intel Core i3-530 CPU
Kingston 2 x 2GB ECC Unbuffered DDR3 1333 RAM
Corsair 650TX PSU
I have a 14.1TB RAID-Z1 array. It's 2 ZPools total.
Before this upgrade, transfer speeds using CIFS from my laptop to the server (pure gigabit network, nothing else is allowed on it, all wired) - were between 30-70MBps depending on what else was happening. Now, with nothing else going on, Windows literally times out on most transfers. Sometimes it will linger around 10kBps for a few minutes before saying "check your network connection..."
Any ideas what happened here? I'm happy to post any logs as required. Just let me know how to get to them.
Thanks all.
Update: Just restarted the server again, still no change. Now it takes around 4 minutes to open a folder that resides on FreeNAS (used to be <1 second).