mistaox wrote:booponix wrote:
I swear, the next RTFM I get from some doofus kid who just learned to chain command line commands and thinks he's Matthew Broderick in War Games... is going to put me over the edge.
Well if that's all it takes, might I direct you to a bridge in Brooklyn?? lol
Hey...I didn't mean to come off in a "RTFM" kind of way.
My reply was not based on any assumption as to your level of knowledge or experience, rather on my own personal experiences:
Anything UNIX + anything Windows = Oil + Water
You might be able to mix the two...but only after some vigorous stirring...try a blender even.
Java has nothing to do with it...well...perhaps it does...As I had no issue accessing files directly on the NAS when not using subsonic. Though I did notice that the NAS seemed to throttle down my bandwidth. Then again, there is no doubt a substantial amount of file buffering that takes place when accessing a file using this method.
When I first started using Subsonic I envisioned a Windows based web server and a Linux based Nas solution...Secure and user friendly..right??
NOPE!
I built my own NAS using Freenas and a custom XP iso using Nlite for the Web server.
I was using a small 100Mbps network at the time.
No matter what I tried, the throughput on the NAS, could never climb beyond 60mbs/Sec, up or down. This was based on the NAS's own internal bandwidth graphs.
Thinking that Freenas was to blame, I tried OpenFiler..No Change
I then tried Ubuntu as the file sever...no change.
I then tried SUSE..no change
The moment I moved the web server to Ubuntu...it was all good.
It would seem that windows was the problem..right?...not so fast.
I decided to host both the media files and subsonic on separate Windows boxes. The result was the same! The performance was what it was supposed to be....the conclusion??...SAMBA sucks...
Well, it doesn't suck....Its just not good in a mixed environment....how ironic.
So in my mind, for best performance, keep subsonic and its media on the same platform.
Sincerely,
"Doofus kid"