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Network performance dropping below expected rates on a 10gb connection

Network performance dropping below expected rates on a 10gb connection

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Spaceface16518
Senior Member
564
04-10-2016, 08:46 AM
#1
Checked for any missed details. Card copies at 275MB/s to server but slower over ASUS 100C with high latency. Switch shows 10GB uplink, Windows shows 10Gb negotiation. Possible causes could be driver issues, network congestion, or cable quality.
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Spaceface16518
04-10-2016, 08:46 AM #1

Checked for any missed details. Card copies at 275MB/s to server but slower over ASUS 100C with high latency. Switch shows 10GB uplink, Windows shows 10Gb negotiation. Possible causes could be driver issues, network congestion, or cable quality.

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EmilyPlanet
Member
207
04-18-2016, 07:31 AM
#2
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EmilyPlanet
04-18-2016, 07:31 AM #2

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TrilogyXO
Member
154
04-20-2016, 02:42 AM
#3
I use a ZYTEL switch setup, connecting the ASUS card to SFP+ DAC, then routing it through the switch using single-mode fiber to a SFP card in my Truenas. I've just placed an order for an Intel card to evaluate.
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TrilogyXO
04-20-2016, 02:42 AM #3

I use a ZYTEL switch setup, connecting the ASUS card to SFP+ DAC, then routing it through the switch using single-mode fiber to a SFP card in my Truenas. I've just placed an order for an Intel card to evaluate.

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_NeoBl0X_
Senior Member
635
04-20-2016, 03:15 AM
#4
The devices you're using are connected via a specific setup, and the 10-gig system may not handle 1.5-gig properly. Legacy hardware typically doesn't support this upgrade. A single network connection might revert to basic Gigabit speeds.
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_NeoBl0X_
04-20-2016, 03:15 AM #4

The devices you're using are connected via a specific setup, and the 10-gig system may not handle 1.5-gig properly. Legacy hardware typically doesn't support this upgrade. A single network connection might revert to basic Gigabit speeds.

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HOCheese
Junior Member
13
04-27-2016, 03:04 AM
#5
It's my desktop with an ASUS 100c networking card. That goes over cat6e to the SFP Plus, that slots into my switch which supports 100 meg or 10 gig on that port. Then that goes out 2.5 gig to my NAS. I am still waiting on the fiber interconnect from the NAS to another 10 gig SFP+ port on my switch. My on-board 2.5 gig from the desktop to the 2.5 gig port on the switch operates much faster than my 10 gig to the 10 gig port on the switch. I've heard bad reviews of this ASUS card I have so I'm suspecting maybe that's a problem but I don't know. I ordered another Intel 10 gig card, and I'm going to make another cable here later today and see if that changes anything
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HOCheese
04-27-2016, 03:04 AM #5

It's my desktop with an ASUS 100c networking card. That goes over cat6e to the SFP Plus, that slots into my switch which supports 100 meg or 10 gig on that port. Then that goes out 2.5 gig to my NAS. I am still waiting on the fiber interconnect from the NAS to another 10 gig SFP+ port on my switch. My on-board 2.5 gig from the desktop to the 2.5 gig port on the switch operates much faster than my 10 gig to the 10 gig port on the switch. I've heard bad reviews of this ASUS card I have so I'm suspecting maybe that's a problem but I don't know. I ordered another Intel 10 gig card, and I'm going to make another cable here later today and see if that changes anything

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GoMigs
Senior Member
614
05-04-2016, 11:17 AM
#6
I recently installed a new cable and didn’t notice any improvement. It seems the card might be faulty.
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GoMigs
05-04-2016, 11:17 AM #6

I recently installed a new cable and didn’t notice any improvement. It seems the card might be faulty.

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Altone123
Member
62
05-04-2016, 02:09 PM
#7
Yes, you can set flow control through the switch using the switch's configuration. If it doesn't function properly on your port, adjust it on the NAS port as well. On my first setup, I faced performance drops for Gigabit clients connecting to a 10Gbit NAS without proper flow control settings.
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Altone123
05-04-2016, 02:09 PM #7

Yes, you can set flow control through the switch using the switch's configuration. If it doesn't function properly on your port, adjust it on the NAS port as well. On my first setup, I faced performance drops for Gigabit clients connecting to a 10Gbit NAS without proper flow control settings.

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SorryNigga
Member
125
05-04-2016, 03:03 PM
#8
I can enable flow control and see what happens. The SFP+ supports up to 100 megabits or 10 gigabits. There’s no direct single-mode fiber connection to Nas once switched, so no copper will be used in the line.
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SorryNigga
05-04-2016, 03:03 PM #8

I can enable flow control and see what happens. The SFP+ supports up to 100 megabits or 10 gigabits. There’s no direct single-mode fiber connection to Nas once switched, so no copper will be used in the line.