On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 10:00:47 +0100 Patrick Proniewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello, > > I'm the happy owner of a Tyan Tiger i7520SD motherboard, sporting two > ethernet ports using a Intel 82571EB GbE controller and running > FreeBSD 6.2 RC1. FreeBSD uses the em driver for this ports: > > dmesg excerpt: > em0: <Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection Version - 6.2.9> port > 0x2000-0x201f mem 0xd8020000-0xd803ffff,0xd8000000-0xd801ffff irq 16 > at device 0.0 on pci3 > > ifconfig output: > em0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 > options=b<RXCSUM,TXCSUM,VLAN_MTU> > inet 192.168.0.1 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 192.168.0.255 > ether 00:e0:81:42:e3:aa > media: Ethernet autoselect (1000baseTX <full-duplex>) > status: active > > The box uses its 100baseT fxp driven eth port for internet access, > and shares this access with a Mac OS X plugged on the em0 interface. > I've set up pf with firewall and nat rules to act as a gateway. Both > machines are in "Ethernet autoselect (1000baseTX <full-duplex>)" and > linked with a direct ethernet wire. > > File transfert through em0 looks quite slow : at best 17 MB/s (scp > gives better results than http, tested with a 120MB file) > File copy, from one HDD to another or from one HDD to /dev/null, > ranges from 30 to 48 MB/s on the FreeBSD side (SATA HD). Try testing FTP. SCP will be doing encryption which will slow the process down. I can't say which HTTP would be slower than that. I have some Dell's with similar specification which will happily FTP back and forth at around 40MB/s which is reasonable. > I would like to know if there is a good method to find the bottleneck > and to get rid of it. How comes my GbE is so slow ? This is a dedicated network right? No other traffic? Dom _______________________________________________ freebsd-performance@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-performance To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"