first things first... your speed is only as fast as its slowest
link... in your case, site A upstream is 4mpbs and site B downstream
is 20mbps.. your fastest speed you can get is 4mbps..

second.. if those multiple links are doing load sharing or load
balancing and not bonding two or more links.. the average bandwidth of
your multiple links is your fastest speed you can get...

third... if you want to saturate your link... play with TCP window
size.. but in linux, TCP window scale is already enabled...

fourth.. if you want faster synchronization.. you need to enable the
compression of the sync client but if the data is already compressed..
compression wont benefit much...

fifth..  you can play with parallel synchronization to speed it up
where each sync client is synchronizing different branches of your
folder tree...

fooler.


On Mon, Feb 2, 2015 at 3:31 AM, Michael Tinsay <[email protected]> wrote:
> Here's the situation:
>
> Site A has 4 DSL lines (various telcos, combined speed of around 15Mbps down
> / 4 Mbps up) and site B has 2 DSL lines (combined speed of 20Mbps down, 2
> Mbps up).  There are also two Domestic Leased Lines of 4Mbps each.  I would
> like to sync a folder from site A to site B.
>
> Is there a software-based solution that would make full use of the total of
> 12 Mbps upstream bandwidth from site A?
>
>
> --- mike t.
>
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