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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers ls is taking long time to list Post 302717943 by Don Cragun on Thursday 18th of October 2012 06:09:41 PM
Old 10-18-2012
When you use NFS to access remote files, it keeps a cache of recently accessed blocks. As time goes by the cache is filled with more recently accessed files. So the first access when the cache is empty is relatively slow and later reads of the same page are relatively fast until those pages have been pushed out of the cache.
 

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FS_GETCACHEPARMS(1)					       AFS Command Reference					       FS_GETCACHEPARMS(1)

NAME
fs_getcacheparms - Displays the current size and usage of the cache SYNOPSIS
fs getcacheparms [-help] [-files] [-excessive] fs getca [-h] [-files] [-excessive] DESCRIPTION
The fs getcacheparms command displays the current size of the cache (which can be in memory or on disk), and the amount currently in use. The reported statistics are from kernel memory, so the reported size can differ from the setting specified in the /etc/openafs/cacheinfo file on a machine using a disk cache, if the fs setcachesize command has been used to alter cache size. OPTIONS
-help Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are ignored. -files Displays the current number of cache files in use, and the maximum available, as well as displaying the current cache size. -excessive Displays detailed cache statistics, including the flags set on each cache element, and the distribution of cache entries by size. OUTPUT
The output reports AFS using <amount> of the cache's available <size> 1K byte blocks. where <amount> is the number of kilobyte blocks currently used to cache data and status information, and <size> is the total current cache size. EXAMPLES
The following example shows the output on a machine with a 25000 kilobyte cache. % fs getcacheparms AFS using 22876 of the cache's available 25000 1K byte blocks. The following shows the output when asked to show file information. % fs getcacheparm -files AFS using 0% of cache blocks (897 of 200000 1k blocks) 1% of the cache files (79 of 6250 files) And finally, the following detailed information can be obtained by using the excessive flag % fs getcacheparm -excessive AFS using 0% of cache blocks (897 of 200000 1k blocks) 1% of the cache files (79 of 6250 files) afs_cacheFiles: 6250 IFFree: 6171 IFEverUsed: 79 IFDataMod: 0 IFDirtyPages: 0 IFAnyPages: 0 IFDiscarded: 1 DCentries: 3122 0k- 4K: 74 4k- 16k: 3045 16k- 64k: 2 64k- 256k: 0 256k- 1M: 1 >=1M: 0 PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
None SEE ALSO
fs_setcachesize(1) COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved. This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell. OpenAFS 2012-03-26 FS_GETCACHEPARMS(1)
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