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Unable to achieve complete full-duplex 2Gbps performance

Unable to achieve complete full-duplex 2Gbps performance

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Fretti0_YTB
Member
196
09-10-2016, 09:20 AM
#1
-w 1024KB, -p PORT, -t 60. Good news: I can achieve 2Gbps outgoing and 1Gbps incoming to each device. I can also get simultaneous 1Gbps out and 1Gbps in for individual clients. However, I'm limited to about 1Gbps incoming when both clients try together, though the actual speeds remain around 1Gbps. On testing all four iperf3 instances at once, I see only ~1.6Gbps out and 800Mbps in simultaneously. Questions: 1. Is there a limitation around 1Gbps for incoming data? Could there be a fix? 2. Around 2.5–3.0 Gbps for combined receive and send, is there a way to improve? 3. Should I rephrase the thread title for clarity?
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Fretti0_YTB
09-10-2016, 09:20 AM #1

-w 1024KB, -p PORT, -t 60. Good news: I can achieve 2Gbps outgoing and 1Gbps incoming to each device. I can also get simultaneous 1Gbps out and 1Gbps in for individual clients. However, I'm limited to about 1Gbps incoming when both clients try together, though the actual speeds remain around 1Gbps. On testing all four iperf3 instances at once, I see only ~1.6Gbps out and 800Mbps in simultaneously. Questions: 1. Is there a limitation around 1Gbps for incoming data? Could there be a fix? 2. Around 2.5–3.0 Gbps for combined receive and send, is there a way to improve? 3. Should I rephrase the thread title for clarity?

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Ladenoeffnung
Junior Member
49
09-10-2016, 02:10 PM
#2
The algorithm currently in use on your switch for LACP is not specified. Typically, it aims to maximize server-to-multiple-host bandwidth, though single-host-to-single-host connections often default to a single interface.
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Ladenoeffnung
09-10-2016, 02:10 PM #2

The algorithm currently in use on your switch for LACP is not specified. Typically, it aims to maximize server-to-multiple-host bandwidth, though single-host-to-single-host connections often default to a single interface.

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Peedy
Senior Member
641
09-10-2016, 02:32 PM
#3
It looks like the settings aren't saved or adjustable for your TP-link model, so you likely can't change them.
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Peedy
09-10-2016, 02:32 PM #3

It looks like the settings aren't saved or adjustable for your TP-link model, so you likely can't change them.

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LOvE_v3v
Junior Member
33
09-26-2016, 06:36 AM
#4
The switch likely uses a MAC-based method to distribute network traffic. Your host decides which port sends outgoing traffic, while the switch manages incoming traffic through the connected ports. Try running tests with multiple devices sending data to the computer that has paired interfaces—different transmitting MAC addresses should help the switch balance the connections across ports. EDIT: This matches what @beersykins mentioned too.
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LOvE_v3v
09-26-2016, 06:36 AM #4

The switch likely uses a MAC-based method to distribute network traffic. Your host decides which port sends outgoing traffic, while the switch manages incoming traffic through the connected ports. Try running tests with multiple devices sending data to the computer that has paired interfaces—different transmitting MAC addresses should help the switch balance the connections across ports. EDIT: This matches what @beersykins mentioned too.

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dackdack456
Junior Member
32
09-26-2016, 07:27 AM
#5
The manual doesn't mention any settings related to the LAG.
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dackdack456
09-26-2016, 07:27 AM #5

The manual doesn't mention any settings related to the LAG.

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MaxSI003
Junior Member
13
09-26-2016, 10:12 AM
#6
It seems the issue arises because combining two 1Gbps connections to reach 2Gbps is limited by a faulty caching method.
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MaxSI003
09-26-2016, 10:12 AM #6

It seems the issue arises because combining two 1Gbps connections to reach 2Gbps is limited by a faulty caching method.

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Pasta63
Junior Member
42
09-26-2016, 10:29 AM
#7
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Pasta63
09-26-2016, 10:29 AM #7