F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Full network usage on a 1GBit NIC yet only 40-60 MB/s transfer speed observed

Full network usage on a 1GBit NIC yet only 40-60 MB/s transfer speed observed

Full network usage on a 1GBit NIC yet only 40-60 MB/s transfer speed observed

N
niuhayan
Member
165
09-02-2016, 12:01 AM
#1
Hi, I'm trying to understand what's happening with my server. I have a single 1GBit/s network card on my Windows machine and two additional 1GBit/s NICs on my Truenas Server. When connecting, I only see 40-60 MB/s from Windows to Truenas, and neither of the NICs is using high CPU resources. There are no storage or RAM bottlenecks, and Windows shows over 900 MBit/s, but my actual transfer speed is much lower. On a laptop, my normal PC achieves 100-110 MB/s easily. Do you encounter anything similar? Also, even if I swap out the quad card for a single 1GBit/s NIC, performance drops significantly. All connections go through the same 48-port switch, which should support over 90 GB/s, but all tests with that setup failed. Let me know if this has happened before.
N
niuhayan
09-02-2016, 12:01 AM #1

Hi, I'm trying to understand what's happening with my server. I have a single 1GBit/s network card on my Windows machine and two additional 1GBit/s NICs on my Truenas Server. When connecting, I only see 40-60 MB/s from Windows to Truenas, and neither of the NICs is using high CPU resources. There are no storage or RAM bottlenecks, and Windows shows over 900 MBit/s, but my actual transfer speed is much lower. On a laptop, my normal PC achieves 100-110 MB/s easily. Do you encounter anything similar? Also, even if I swap out the quad card for a single 1GBit/s NIC, performance drops significantly. All connections go through the same 48-port switch, which should support over 90 GB/s, but all tests with that setup failed. Let me know if this has happened before.

T
Tekkerzz25
Member
191
09-02-2016, 04:29 AM
#2
Could the network configuration be incorrect? It might not be set to the optimal choice.
T
Tekkerzz25
09-02-2016, 04:29 AM #2

Could the network configuration be incorrect? It might not be set to the optimal choice.

N
normaldude27
Junior Member
49
09-02-2016, 05:39 AM
#3
Are you checking for excessive packet drops due to retries? iperf3 outputs metrics showing traffic usage and retry attempts. It helps monitor network performance and overhead during testing.
N
normaldude27
09-02-2016, 05:39 AM #3

Are you checking for excessive packet drops due to retries? iperf3 outputs metrics showing traffic usage and retry attempts. It helps monitor network performance and overhead during testing.

C
chimpchop123
Member
59
09-02-2016, 07:30 AM
#4
All IPv4 settings were automatically reinitialized without changes. For a full reset of a network interface, consider using command-line tools or system settings directly.
C
chimpchop123
09-02-2016, 07:30 AM #4

All IPv4 settings were automatically reinitialized without changes. For a full reset of a network interface, consider using command-line tools or system settings directly.

G
Greeny79
Member
57
09-19-2016, 11:45 AM
#5
You can run Iperf3 directly in the terminal to see all available commands. It will list the options you can choose from. Since you haven’t used it before, start with basic commands like `iperf3` and explore from there.
G
Greeny79
09-19-2016, 11:45 AM #5

You can run Iperf3 directly in the terminal to see all available commands. It will list the options you can choose from. Since you haven’t used it before, start with basic commands like `iperf3` and explore from there.

H
hunchmuffin6
Member
209
09-19-2016, 04:30 PM
#6
Avoid writing a full Iperf3 guide. Check tutorial sites or videos for help. This platform supports Windows Iperf3.
H
hunchmuffin6
09-19-2016, 04:30 PM #6

Avoid writing a full Iperf3 guide. Check tutorial sites or videos for help. This platform supports Windows Iperf3.