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oshae's avatar
oshae
Tutor
Jan 15, 2016
Solved

CrashPlan Performance

I've been using CrashPlan on my Pro 6 for quite some time now and have been very happy with it. All of what I want to backup (to CrashPlan's cloud) is already there, and not much additional data is g...
  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Jan 15, 2016

    oshae wrote:

    So you just leave the CPU% at 100%? It doesn't impact things like SMB performance if a backup is running at the same time?

     

     


    It might slow it down some, but not enough to be a problem. 

     


    oshae wrote:
     I had some PC2-6400 DIMMs kicking around so I tested the unit with 2GB. It is seems to have completely resolved the issue so RAM does seem to be the culprit. I was thinking of ordering a new kit of 2 x 2GB, but now that you mention you upgraded your unit to 8GB I'm thinking that may be the way to go. Can I ask what brand/spec of RAM you're using in yours?

     

     


    Crashplan itself can't use more the 3600MB of ram, so 8 GB was probably overkill.  I used Patriot Memory (Patriot Signature Line 8GB DDR2 800 PC2 6400 Memory Module PSD28G800K).

     

    My volume size is likely bigger than yours (I'm backing up ~7-8 TB, and my crashplan central archive had reached over 20 TB last June).  It reached a point where crashplan started crashing because it had run out of memory.  If you are aren't seeing restart logs in /usr/local/crashplan you likely don't have that issue.

     


    oshae wrote:

     

     

    Also, I'm not familiar with the -Xmx setting? Can you elaborate or point me in the right direction?

     


    So what you've done so far is simply freeing more memory up for the rest of the NAS.  If you want to allow Crashplan to use more memory, then you need to increase the ceiling on the java VM heap size.  That's what -Xmx does.

     

    If you click on the house on the upper right of the crashplan app, it will open a command interface on the PC.  If you just type "java mx" it will tell you the current heap max.  That should be 1024MB on your setup.  If you enter "java mx 1536" it would adjust it upward to 1536 MB.  The max is about 3700MB (if you go much above that, Java will actually crash).

     

    You never want to set the value higher than your physical memory, because the pro doesn't handle swapping very well. 

     

     

    Overall, since your performance problem is fixed, there is no reason to do anything just yet with "java mx".

     

    I guess you could upgrade the ram under the theory that the old memory the pro uses will only harder to find later on.  Or just leave well enough alone.

     

     

     

     

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