F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks IIS, SMB, FTP – welche Technologie passt zu dir?

IIS, SMB, FTP – welche Technologie passt zu dir?

IIS, SMB, FTP – welche Technologie passt zu dir?

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jjmonkey13
Member
236
03-02-2016, 10:49 PM
#21
The scaling is managed by Windows, not a sign of the agreed-upon speed. To resize to the next level, you must reach or surpass the maximum limit.
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jjmonkey13
03-02-2016, 10:49 PM #21

The scaling is managed by Windows, not a sign of the agreed-upon speed. To resize to the next level, you must reach or surpass the maximum limit.

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184
03-04-2016, 03:38 PM
#22
I'm going to test that next (direct link). If it fails, it might be a NIC problem. If it succeeds, it could mean network issues. Great! The 1 gbps label is the highest on the chart and changes with usage. I saw another screenshot showing both devices connected at 2.5 gbps. I can verify that too; the link speed indicator on each NIC is green, confirming a 2.5 gbps connection as described in the manuals (they're basically the same motherboards).
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PickleSauce300
03-04-2016, 03:38 PM #22

I'm going to test that next (direct link). If it fails, it might be a NIC problem. If it succeeds, it could mean network issues. Great! The 1 gbps label is the highest on the chart and changes with usage. I saw another screenshot showing both devices connected at 2.5 gbps. I can verify that too; the link speed indicator on each NIC is green, confirming a 2.5 gbps connection as described in the manuals (they're basically the same motherboards).

Y
yar_pvp
Member
166
03-04-2016, 11:37 PM
#23
I just adjusted the machines into the same VLAN and turned off the firewall rules that weren’t needed anymore. That quickly improved the SMBD speeds. I was seeing around 270-278 MBps consistently (NVME to NVME) while my kids streamed on Plex, my wife used Teams, and my work VPN ran on a different laptop. The transfer rate was about 230 MBps, which matches the maximum speed of that spinner pair. I’m feeling mixed about this outcome. On one hand, I’m really grateful it’s fixed. On the other, it’s concerning because separate VLANs and two firewall rules were causing a big drop in speeds. Third, I’m shocked it’s resolved now—especially since there was still over 3 TB of data waiting to be moved. Thanks everyone for helping me through this!
Y
yar_pvp
03-04-2016, 11:37 PM #23

I just adjusted the machines into the same VLAN and turned off the firewall rules that weren’t needed anymore. That quickly improved the SMBD speeds. I was seeing around 270-278 MBps consistently (NVME to NVME) while my kids streamed on Plex, my wife used Teams, and my work VPN ran on a different laptop. The transfer rate was about 230 MBps, which matches the maximum speed of that spinner pair. I’m feeling mixed about this outcome. On one hand, I’m really grateful it’s fixed. On the other, it’s concerning because separate VLANs and two firewall rules were causing a big drop in speeds. Third, I’m shocked it’s resolved now—especially since there was still over 3 TB of data waiting to be moved. Thanks everyone for helping me through this!

R
Raidex20
Posting Freak
751
03-06-2016, 12:55 AM
#24
It seems the VLAN connection or firewall operates at gigabit rates, which is disappointing. Could you share the equipment you were employing?
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Raidex20
03-06-2016, 12:55 AM #24

It seems the VLAN connection or firewall operates at gigabit rates, which is disappointing. Could you share the equipment you were employing?

Z
Zy4
Junior Member
3
03-24-2016, 02:25 PM
#25
UDM SE supports gateway and general console administration. It handles 3.5 Gbps routing with IDS/IPS over WAN, making simple VLAN configurations challenging. The device is a Unifi Enterprise model with 24 ports, powered via POE. It connects to the UDM using a short SFP+ DAC. Both workstations are linked to the switch through 2.5 Gbps ports with RJ-45 cables.
Z
Zy4
03-24-2016, 02:25 PM #25

UDM SE supports gateway and general console administration. It handles 3.5 Gbps routing with IDS/IPS over WAN, making simple VLAN configurations challenging. The device is a Unifi Enterprise model with 24 ports, powered via POE. It connects to the UDM using a short SFP+ DAC. Both workstations are linked to the switch through 2.5 Gbps ports with RJ-45 cables.

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