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Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed. |
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#1 |
Too lazy to set a custom title
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Australia
Posts: 17,393
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Do you use fast or gigabit ethernet on your home/biz network?
I've upgraded to fastethernet (100Mbit/sec) and installed Samba so that I can back up directly from my XP box to my server, but it's pretty slow! The maximum speed is about 6Mbytes/sec, and it slows down other network activity from the comp like web browsing... I guess it's near completely saturated.
Anyone here use gigabit ether? (1000Mbit/sec). I'm pretty sure my server and drive are not the bottleneck in this case... perhaps a couple of gigabit cards and a crossover cable would do the trick. ![]() |
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#2 |
Confirmed User
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 720
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I use it and it's much better than 100 Mb, but the harddrive is the major bottleneck at this point.
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#3 |
Confirmed User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The middle of nowhere
Posts: 357
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Or an external firewire drive.
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#4 |
Too lazy to set a custom title
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Australia
Posts: 17,393
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Yeah, I'm not expecting to leap up to 60Mbytes/sec by moving to gigabit... but 15-20Mbytes/sec or higher would be good. gigabit also leaves plenty of headroom for other packets to squeeze through the network when I'm running a full backup session. Hmm, speaking of full backups, I have 200Gb+ on this workstation. I'm not sure whether I should even bother trying with only 100Mbit ether.
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#5 | |
Confirmed User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: New Joisey
Posts: 3,087
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Quote:
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#6 |
Registered User
Industry Role:
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 61
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If you are using a hub and not a switch then you will have that problem. You are utilizing about 48mbps on your connection device between computers. That should not effect a 3 mbps cable connection. You also may be killing your work stations i/o performance (hard drive). What type of cpu and what hard drive specs are in your computer.
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#7 |
Registered User
Industry Role:
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 61
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Upgrading to gigabit copper will not help you at this point since you are not even utilizing a fast ethernet adapter. 6M Bytes * 8 = 48 Mbits per second. Your nic card is capable of about 12.5 MegaBytes per second of data transfer.
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