F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Several big files move more quickly from my LAN file server compared to smaller ones.

Several big files move more quickly from my LAN file server compared to smaller ones.

Several big files move more quickly from my LAN file server compared to smaller ones.

A
agarmor
Member
223
05-06-2021, 11:15 AM
#1
Hey everyone! I've got several Linux ISOs set up on my file server. After switching to Gigabit networking with my routers and cables, I started testing speeds. Some files moved smoothly from the HDD on my server to the SSD on my PC at full Gigabit, but another file would jump to Gigabit initially then slow down to around 250Mbps afterward. When I copied the same file back from my PC to the server's HDD, it worked perfectly at Gigabit. I'm using Linux Mint 20.3 on the server with a dedicated HDD and a Windows 11 PC. I'm just copying files via File Explorer between network and local drives. Any thoughts on what's happening? Also, a bit of extra info – I'm on its own dedicated HDD for the shared folder, and my computer is running Windows 11. Thanks!
A
agarmor
05-06-2021, 11:15 AM #1

Hey everyone! I've got several Linux ISOs set up on my file server. After switching to Gigabit networking with my routers and cables, I started testing speeds. Some files moved smoothly from the HDD on my server to the SSD on my PC at full Gigabit, but another file would jump to Gigabit initially then slow down to around 250Mbps afterward. When I copied the same file back from my PC to the server's HDD, it worked perfectly at Gigabit. I'm using Linux Mint 20.3 on the server with a dedicated HDD and a Windows 11 PC. I'm just copying files via File Explorer between network and local drives. Any thoughts on what's happening? Also, a bit of extra info – I'm on its own dedicated HDD for the shared folder, and my computer is running Windows 11. Thanks!

L
Lord_Brynjolf
Junior Member
8
05-25-2021, 05:42 PM
#2
It might be due to fragmentation or even bad sectors on the HDD. Excessive movement of the head during copying can significantly reduce performance. If error correction is heavily used, this could also impact speed. After saving the file, does the process repeat from the new position and become slower again?
L
Lord_Brynjolf
05-25-2021, 05:42 PM #2

It might be due to fragmentation or even bad sectors on the HDD. Excessive movement of the head during copying can significantly reduce performance. If error correction is heavily used, this could also impact speed. After saving the file, does the process repeat from the new position and become slower again?

P
Pauxyneu
Member
138
05-31-2021, 07:23 AM
#3
I believed you had a good idea, but the result didn't improve even after creating another copy from the server.
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Pauxyneu
05-31-2021, 07:23 AM #3

I believed you had a good idea, but the result didn't improve even after creating another copy from the server.