Try this: Also, here's the registry key again that users can try to adjust to make their SCSI or FC cards go faster: ----------------------------------------------------------------- HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE HARDWARE DEVICEMAP SCSI SCSIPORT (Driver -->i.e. Symmpi) SYSTEM CURRENTCONTROLSET SERVICES (Driver) PARAMETERS DEVICE ->MaximumSGList The MaximumSGList value is the one you want to set: (formula: if value 65, 65 - 1 = 64 x 4K = 256K Transfers) 65 = 256K transfers 33 = 128K transfers 17 = 64k transfers ----------------------------------------------------------------- Where it says 'driver', that will be different depending on what kind of HBA it is and often has the brand name somewhat incorporated. Sometimes the MaximumSGList key doesn't exist, the user can add it. Changing this value can have a very tangible affect on performance, I would suggest users who don't like their performance try 256k, and if that doesn't work, 128k (not all cards work with all values).
Is that 5500MB/min vs 1500 MB/min what's in the logs of both programs, or is it something you measured (amount of data dived by time it took in minutes)? Data rates reported by Retrospect are sometimes not very accurate, depending on the verify method used. We can't find Robin's registry entry in our Windows 2008 setup, but we use a SAS hba. My speeds are: Uncompressed = 1000-1200 MB/min. Hardware data compression = 1650-1750 MB/min.* Verify (md5 media verify) = more than 5000MB/min.* *) Data structure dependent, some data just compresses better resulting in higher numbers. So your mileage may vary, depending on your data. We're using a HP StorageWorks LTO-4 Ultrium 1760 SAS drive with a HP SC44Ge Host Bus Adapter.
Tapes are HP LTO Ultrium 4 1.6 TB RW (model C7974A). We just added Robin's suggestion into the registry, albeit a bit different because we use a SAS hba and Windows 2008 R2. How To Install Ciss On Hp Printer.
With a 256K setting during the first 5 minutes it now seems to do around 2600-2700MB/min. Compression and Encryption are off and the data are large ZIP files. I need some further testing to be sure if it also works with the regular mixed bunch of files and, most important for us, backup transfers (disk to tape). 1) Make sure backup exec drivers are removed before a backup with Retrospect.
Device and Hardware Compatibility-Windows; HP Ultrium SCSI LTO4 Speed. In our Windows 2008 setup, but we use a SAS hba. With a HP SC44Ge Host Bus Adapter. I'm trying to get my Debian 4.0 system to recognize a SAS host bus adaptor, the HP SC44Ge. The HBA requires an mpt (aka mptlinux) driver.
We load drivers when the program opens, not when the computer starts. Program Stock Barang Php Tutorials there. The result could be conflicts with Backup exec drivers. 2) Is Backup Exec using MB/Min or values per second? 3) Make sure you have the latest SCSI Card Drivers and Firmware 4) What type of data, big files, little files, etc? 5) You could try to turn off MD5 digests in the preferences. This will give you higher speed but reduce your verify options for the media. I do not want to highjack Johnny's topic.