Wcarchive Does 1.39tb In 24 Hours 116
Josef Grosch writes
"Walnut Creek's FTP machine, wcarchive, running FreeBSD
transfered 1.39 Terabyte in a single 24 hour period. "
Money will say more in one moment than the most eloquent lover can in years.
This is true (Score:1)
Check the FreeBSD handbook entry for how to do it:
http://www.freebsd.org/FAQ/FAQ52.html#52 [freebsd.org]
Hah! Cool post! (Score:1)
and even better...
Hah!
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
overhead, the global Internet packet loss rate (which averages about 7%), and FTP overhead, and you end up with about
Re:Number of floppies! (Score:1)
Round up to 954,841 and THAT'S how many floppies it would take to hold that much data. Wonder how long it would take to split that? Any estimates? =)
Well, zipping a large file to disks here, without compression, takes a fairly regular 80 seconds per disk....so....
80 * 954,841 == 76,387,280 seconds == 21218.69 hours == 884.11 days == 2.42 years (roughly).
Not bad for a days work. :-)
Umm...(Score:2,Informative) ? (ahem!)
dylan_-
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Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
Though I suspect this issue is not relevant for wcarchive. For one thing, since it's sole purpose is serving files through ftp, it doesn't need to adapt to different load usages. For another thing, I doubt it ever swaps... Not that Linux can handle 4 Gb of RAM on ia32, but...
Nevertheless, there are still gains in the handling of memory on the FreeBSD. David Greeman _is_ one of the responsibles for the vm subsystem in FreeBSD, and has been so for a long time.
Micron passing up big opportunity (Score:1)
They could get early market share on FreeBSD pre-loaded servers.
If they don't, I'm sure someone else will...
Any Free/Net/OpenBSD VARs out there?
Re:Perhaps a new benchmaking technique? (Score:4)
God I hope you are joking. (Score:1)
Re:Unverified (Score:1)
Just reset the count every 24 hours.
PCs vs. Workstations (Score:1)
Number of floppies! (Score:1)
Supposedly 1,391,836,770,942 bytes have been transferred (bout 1.39TB).
A floppy disk has 2827 usable 512-byte sectors. Do the simple multiplication and that floppy disk holds 1,457,644 bytes.
After some division fun you get 954,840.6017724.
Round up to 954,841 and THAT'S how many floppies it would take to hold that much data.
Wonder how long it would take to split that? Any estimates? =)
--Rob
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void docrazythings(){
docrazythings();
}
Re:"FreeBSD has a better logo" or "Dump the pengui (Score:1)
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:5)
I'm biased. I work with Justin here at Pluto, and we have Video server machines based on FreeBSD that are disk bandwidth limited. It is very fast and I'm very impressed with it.
Warner Losh
Re:Oh my word (Score:1)
your M$ put alot of money on kernel research. WHO CARES, I wish you die soon for what you said here. I dont want you to post anything here, you don't belong here, Go play around somewhere else, DIE YOU MORON.
Re:Cool (Score:1)
I think that'd be cool.
Re:Couldn't have done it without us! (Score:1)
couldn't have done it without us? sounds a little like BSD envy to me.
all in good fun, all in good fun......
--atdot
(bsdie)
Hey! Waitaminute! (Score:1)
Re: 2940U2W (Score:2)
Thanks.
perl -e 'print scalar reverse q(\)-:
Perhaps, but... (Score:1)
Re:What's the machine config? (Score:4)
Up until just recently the box was a lowly 200pro as far as i know and was still setting records.
Daniel Harvey
No, what is your point? (Score:1)
This is genuine curiousity here. Your point went right by me.
Re:What's the machine config? (Score:2)
Re:Unverified (Score:1)
What exactly would you propose we do? Count the bits one at a time as they leave WC CDROM?
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
Total theoretical bandwidth: (100 Mbps * 86400 seconds) / 8 bits per Byte == 1.08 TB (assuming
1000000 MB == 1 TB).
Of course, overhead will drop this number some, but they must be saturating their Fast Ethernet line continuously!
Re:No, what is your point? (Score:1)
Not just a record, but the 1TB barrier (Score:1)
Perhaps a new benchmaking technique? (Score:4)
Re:Cool (Score:1)
Re:No, what is your point? (Score:1)
Apologies!
Terabytes, not megabytes. (Score:1)
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
Sarcasm-challenged moderators? (Score:1)
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
Re:Hey! Waitaminute! (Score:1)
Yes, and your post was probably interpreted as a shot at FreeBSD.
Re:Perhaps a new benchmaking technique? (Score:1)
Re:NT is better. Face is (Score:1)
What's the machine config? (Score:1)
I'm just curious what the machine config is OTHER than the gig ethernet.
_Deirdre
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
I would also like to echo your sentiment.
Re:That thing on top (Score:1)
read the file [cdrom.com] describing the configuration.
It's a Siliconrax SR-485 rack mount peripheral chassis [siliconrax.com] with a built in 9" or 10" monitor
It also houses the Mylex [mylex.com] DAC960SXI SCSI-SCSI 6 channel RAID controller, w/256MB cache.
Okay, here's a question (Score:2)
My question is, why not take one of these general-purpose OSes and, for some given task, hard-code in optimizations? This new OS could still remain backwards-compatible with the old OS, so it wouldn't really be a fork.
The sort of optimization I'm thinking of here would be along the lines of giving some daemon a hard-coded place in memory, or some similarly evil thing. (I recall hearing that NT did something along these lines; a discussion of it came up on one of the
Replace it with NT? (Score:1)
Re:All Hail FreeBSD! (Score:3)
With Linux getting such media attention, it's normal that some people in the community don't get the message or the point or whatever... It's like everything else, kids come, get bored and go away...
I'm definitely impressed with *BSD, and may well give it (them?) a go when I have a PC for it.
Anyway, the point is, we don't fight each other mind you, we just fight world domination by ONE and unique operating system... I want choice! I want the best system for the task, whichever it is... And if FreeBSD is that much better than other systems for File/Web/FTP servers, well, I'll just have to try it by myself!
Repeat after me, we're not fighting each other, we must keep an open mind and as they say over here, what have I contributed to the community today?
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Re:IDE Rulez, as long as you have only one (Score:1)
If you have lots of disk access, lots of disk, there is no way IDE can compete. Even more if you want your CPU time for other things. Ever heard of tag queues?
Re:Perhaps a new benchmaking technique? (Score:1)
Re:Cool (Score:1)
The free un*x programmers have put a lot of love into kernel research/development to make their kernels, that's why they are superior to NT.
First time... (Score:1)
Re:Quick! (Score:1)
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Re:Terabit or Terabyte? (Score:1)
Personally, I try to write "bits" or "bytes" explicitly, so that there's no possibility of confusion. (Except of course there is, because sometimes "mega" means 2^20, and sometimes it means 10^6.)
http://www.bafug.org/NewRecord.html [bafug.org] implies that the amount of data shifted really was 1.39*10^12 bytes in a day, which I reckon comes to around 15 megabytes a second on average.
1.39 terabits/day wouldn't be news.
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:2)
Terabit or Terabyte? (Score:2)
Same goes for the first letter: T is the real symbol for Tera(=10^12), while M is for Mega(=10^6) and m is for milli(=10^-3), D is for deka(=10^1) and d is for deci(=10^-1). t has no special meaning, so it may also be understood if used for Tera although I would not recommend using it this way.
My PC has 32 MB of RAM, while my modem transfers data at a speed of 33 kb/sec - You see de difference.
ms
PS: I'm missing SUP and SUB for super/subskripts - Rob, pls add them
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
But it's more than just 13MB p/s. I'm sure almost any modern OS, including NT, could pump through 13MB p/s. But cdrom.com is doing much more than that. It's managing 5000 concurrent connections as well. I don't know that any OS could do that _and_ still pump out 13MB p/s.
Re:Quick! (Score:2)
Re:All Hail FreeBSD! (Score:2)
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
You are most likely not running the comparisons in a fair setup. The default setup of the filesystem on Linux is to gamble with the users' data (metadata is trashed on uncontrolled reboot); the default setup on FreeBSD is to not gamble with data. If you want to compare the FS speed of Linux and FreeBSD, the following comparisons are (reasonably) fair:
As for the TCP/IP stack of Linux being faster: This does not surprise me; I expect it to at the very least be faster for anything that can be micro-benchmarked, and probably as fast as the BSD stack under real world load, too. Dave S Miller has done a very good job. If we (*BSD) have an advantage for real world load, I expect it due to that not being as easy to measure, so we may have an advantage due to actually having run under real world load for a long while).
As for SMP: In my opinion, neither FreeBSD nor Linux is really up to snuff. Attempting to judge between them is really pointless.
Eivind.
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:2)
Re:Quick! (Score:1)
Re:Quick! (Score:1)
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Re:Cool (Score:1)
All Hail FreeBSD! (Score:1)
Now you all know the Power of the FreeBSD side!
Quick! (Score:1)
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honest question, just curious (Score:5)
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:1)
running an SMP kernel.
Re:What's the machine config? (Score:2)
with 40 MHz bus/16bit wide:
single ended : 40M
Low Voltage Differential: 80M
You need to have all your drives and terminators LVD enabled(and no SE devices connected to the same chanel) to run in Ultra2 mode.
Re:What's the machine config? (Score:5)
The file contains more detailed information on the configuration. Also, there's a picture available here [cdrom.com].
Re:SCSI subsystem (Score:1)
Justin Gibbs, who wrote cam, also wrote the aic7xxx driver. When it is ported to Linux, much of the error recovery is gutted because Linux's SCSI subsystem doesn't handle things as well,
espcially in the error recovery realm. One of the things that the Pluto boxes can do is you can pull out a disk at any time and the device is dynamically removed from the system. When you hot plug it back in, it dynamically added back to the system. You just can't do that with Linux when the disks are active.
We use the AIC chips on our pluto box (something like 12-16 of them for all the channels), so it has to be fast....
Re:Okay, here's a question (Score:1)
Re:Terabytes, not megabytes. (Score:1)
Read the name under which the submission was made.
Re:Cool (Score:1)
i get the joke!
IDE Rulez (Score:1)
Seriously,
I use both IDE and SCSI on my servers and workstations.
For large data stores that are rarerly accessed but "must" be online, the new large IDE drives are way-fine, plus the price can't be beat. For the price of a single 50GB SCSI drive I can throw together a computer and 80GB of IDE storage. Transfer speed of these linux boxen over our 100-Base-T network keeps up (and even outpaces) the striped 18GB SCSI drives on our NT server....
Is it as reliable as SCSI? No, but all the data is on tape. Will it hold up under heavy multiuser access??? Probably not, but not every server needs that sort of muscle......
Ditto for workstations. I'll take two or three 20GB IDE drives any day over a single 18GB SCSI drive....
Re:Perhaps a new benchmaking technique? (Score:1)
Re:Unverified (Score:1)
5000 user regestered copy of win-nt4, more than the machine ?
Span...
Re:honest question, just curious (Score:2)
As a FreeBSD user, I'm proud of what the FreeBSD has accomplished. But I agree with you. Is this really as impressive as it seems? Could Linux achieve this performance?
A much more interesting comparison (especially for us FreeBSD users!) would be against NT. I'd love to see Microsoft provide NT running on the same hardware. I'd accept Walnut Creek going 24 hours with NT to see how it would compare...
Popularity (Score:1)
Re:"FreeBSD has a better logo" or "Dump the pengui (Score:1)
Mike
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I can see it now... (Score:4)
And I love every minute of it.
Re:"FreeBSD has a better logo" or "Dump the pengui (Score:1)
Linus, not Linux. Linus likes penguins, *Linux* is the kernel. As for *demonic unix roots*. What?!
But I do agree on one point, the Linux logo sucks. The *BSD logo rules.
Re:Really? (Score: -1, Troll) (Score:1)
Is your GF from Microsoft?
No, that's GPF.
dylan_-
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The Stats Have A Tale To Tell (Score:3)
120 GB for the FreeBSD tree...
13 GB for Seti@Home...
1.5 GB for cheats (seems low for a scr1pt-k1dd13 area)
1 GB for XFree86 (heh)
and at the bottom...
/UPLOADS.TXT 2k.
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Re:honest question, just curious (Score:2)
It certainly blew the socks off the RAID that WE were assembling there... ( 3 NCR Tolerant style chips with 6 drives on an ultra-scsi bus per chip)
Re:Not proven (Score:1)
"Unscientific"? What is it in your definition of "scientific" that makes this claim "unscientific"?
This is *NOT* like a golfer alone at midnight. WCArchive is accessible 24 hours a day, and you can see it's logs at any time. Moreover, there are a lot of people out there partially responsible for this record.