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Slow Gigabit Network

error_f0rce

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I just upgraded my whole network from 10/100 to gigabit. I'm running a Linksys E3000 router, a Netgear Prosafe switch, and a D-Link DNS-321 NAS. I'm aware that there is about a 125MB/s theoretical ceiling (less with real-life overhead, etc.), but I'm only seeing 11-14MB/s transfer speeds from the NAS to my PC.

Here's what I've tried so far, with no effect:
1.) Switching all devices to gigabit only mode.
2.) Disabling anti-virus/defender.
3.) Increasing MTU sizes across the NICs.

The NAS is running RAID-1 with x2 Seagate Barracuda 7200rpm 500GB SATA 3.0Gb/s, and my PC is running SSD's in RAID-0 (see specs), so I don't believe drive speed is the issue here.

Looking for any suggestions or possible solutions here.
Thanks!
 
I just upgraded my whole network from 10/100 to gigabit. I'm running a Linksys E3000 router, a Netgear Prosafe switch, and a D-Link DNS-321 NAS. I'm aware that there is about a 125MB/s theoretical ceiling (less with real-life overhead, etc.), but I'm only seeing 11-14MB/s transfer speeds from the NAS to my PC.

Here's what I've tried so far, with no effect:
1.) Switching all devices to gigabit only mode.
2.) Disabling anti-virus/defender.
3.) Increasing MTU sizes across the NICs.

The NAS is running RAID-1 with x2 Seagate Barracuda 7200rpm 500GB SATA 3.0Gb/s, and my PC is running SSD's in RAID-0 (see specs), so I don't believe drive speed is the issue here.

Looking for any suggestions or possible solutions here.
Thanks!

hrm, i am also on an all gigabit network and my NAS transfer speeds max out at 19MBps. i always assumed it was because the NAS is kinda crappy.
 
I just upgraded my whole network from 10/100 to gigabit. I'm running a Linksys E3000 router, a Netgear Prosafe switch, and a D-Link DNS-321 NAS. I'm aware that there is about a 125MB/s theoretical ceiling (less with real-life overhead, etc.), but I'm only seeing 11-14MB/s transfer speeds from the NAS to my PC.

Here's what I've tried so far, with no effect:
1.) Switching all devices to gigabit only mode.
2.) Disabling anti-virus/defender.
3.) Increasing MTU sizes across the NICs.

The NAS is running RAID-1 with x2 Seagate Barracuda 7200rpm 500GB SATA 3.0Gb/s, and my PC is running SSD's in RAID-0 (see specs), so I don't believe drive speed is the issue here.

Looking for any suggestions or possible solutions here.
Thanks!

I recently did the same thing, but my router is 100Mbps, so everything goes to the switch, and then the router also gets connected to the switch. I have no NAS, but transfers between both machines in my place run as fast as the mechanical hard drives will allow.

I'd say the problem might be in the NAS.

I just googled up your NAS model:
Specifications
Standards
• IEEE 802.3 10Base-T Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet

Support Hard Drive Type
• SATA*
Ports
• 1 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet Port

Compare this to the DNS-323:
Specifications
Standards
• IEEE 802.3 10 Base-T Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3ab 1000Base-T Gigabit

In other words, it seems like your NAS is simply not capable of 1Gbps speeds, despite it listing a 1Gbps port - It doesn't list the 1000Base-T as a supported standard. This might be due to a lack of processing power inside the box.
 
I recently did the same thing, but my router is 100Mbps, so everything goes to the switch, and then the router also gets connected to the switch. I have no NAS, but transfers between both machines in my place run as fast as the mechanical hard drives will allow.

I'd say the problem might be in the NAS.

I just googled up your NAS model:
Specifications
Standards
• IEEE 802.3 10Base-T Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet

Support Hard Drive Type
• SATA*
Ports
• 1 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet Port

Compare this to the DNS-323:
Specifications
Standards
• IEEE 802.3 10 Base-T Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX Fast Ethernet
• IEEE 802.3ab 1000Base-T Gigabit

In other words, it seems like your NAS is simply not capable of 1Gbps speeds, despite it listing a 1Gbps port - It doesn't list the 1000Base-T as a supported standard. This might be due to a lack of processing power inside the box.

wow, this actually explains the same issue with my NAS. well i guess you get what you pay for :laugh:
 
There really needs to be some better legal repercussions for false and misleading advertising.
 
Thanks, that really does explain it. I have to say, it does seem rather disingenuous to advertise a gigabit port when the device itself doesn't support the same speed of throughput. :(
 
Thanks, that really does explain it. I have to say, it does seem rather disingenuous to advertise a gigabit port when the device itself doesn't support the same speed of throughput. :(

i agree, that is pretty lousy of them. my gigabit NAS is a QNAP. i won't be buying anything from them again.
 
are there any difference between reading from the NAS and writing to it?



my gigabit network does max out at 90-110MBytesps transfering from PC to PC
 
are there any difference between reading from the NAS and writing to it?



my gigabit network does max out at 90-110MBytesps transfering from PC to PC

for me it is the exact same.
 
are there any difference between reading from the NAS and writing to it?



my gigabit network does max out at 90-110MBytesps transfering from PC to PC

Just tried, nope same. One funny thing I did notice when boosting the MTU sizes was that I saw spikes of up to 34-80MB/s, and the data bar mirrored the claim, but they only lasted seconds. I wonder if the NAS RAID controller just isn't built to handle it.
 
Just tried, nope same. One funny thing I did notice when boosting the MTU sizes was that I saw spikes of up to 34-80MB/s, and the data bar mirrored the claim, but they only lasted seconds. I wonder if the NAS RAID controller just isn't built to handle it.

I think the controller simply dies. The actual Eth port might be 1Gbps, but the NAS controller simply cannot handle this data rate - Thus it is not listed. It will also explain the short bursts of speed - They last before it runs out of receive buffer.
 
this is just depressing.
 
The problem certainly lies with the NAS device - more specifically Rumba.

Rumba is part of the software on the NAS that allows windows PCs to access the *nix file system on the NAS - typically ext2 or 3.

I have a QNAP 809pro and with Ext2 was getting 36MB/s. After I migrated the NAS to Ext3 the rate increased to 58MB/s.
 
The problem certainly lies with the NAS device - more specifically Rumba.

Rumba is part of the software on the NAS that allows windows PCs to access the *nix file system on the NAS - typically ext2 or 3.

I have a QNAP 809pro and with Ext2 was getting 36MB/s. After I migrated the NAS to Ext3 the rate increased to 58MB/s.

how did you migrate to the new file system?
 
This is why I always tell people don't waste money on NAS devices. A full blown file server will be so much better for only a marginally higher price.

Most of the time these NAS devices use a software RAID controller with a processor that can't handle the load.
 
If you have a spare computer laying around turn it into an unraid server. Mine works fantastic. They even have free software using 3 drives, 2 data and a parity drive.

http://lime-technology.com/forum/index.php
 
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