File.Copy vs. Manual FileStream.Write For Copying File

File.Copy was build around CopyFile Win32 function and this function takes lot of attention from MS crew (remember this Vista-related threads about slow copy performance).

Several clues to improve performance of your method:

  1. Like many said earlier remove Flush method from your cycle. You do not need it at all.
  2. Increasing buffer may help, but only on file-to-file operations, for network shares, or ftp servers this will slow down instead. 60 * 1024 is ideal for network shares, at least before vista. for ftp 32k will be enough in most cases.
  3. Help os by providing your caching strategy (in your case sequential reading and writing), use FileStream constructor override with FileOptions parameter (SequentalScan).
  4. You can speed up copying by using asynchronous pattern (especially useful for network-to-file cases), but do not use threads for this, instead use overlapped io (BeginRead, EndRead, BeginWrite, EndWrite in .net), and do not forget set Asynchronous option in FileStream constructor (see FileOptions)

Example of asynchronous copy pattern:

int Readed = 0;
IAsyncResult ReadResult;
IAsyncResult WriteResult;

ReadResult = sourceStream.BeginRead(ActiveBuffer, 0, ActiveBuffer.Length, null, null);
do
{
    Readed = sourceStream.EndRead(ReadResult);

    WriteResult = destStream.BeginWrite(ActiveBuffer, 0, Readed, null, null);
    WriteBuffer = ActiveBuffer;

    if (Readed > 0)
    {
      ReadResult = sourceStream.BeginRead(BackBuffer, 0, BackBuffer.Length, null, null);
      BackBuffer = Interlocked.Exchange(ref ActiveBuffer, BackBuffer);
    }

    destStream.EndWrite(WriteResult);
  }
  while (Readed > 0);

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