Hi Ed and others,
First, thanks for your fast response. Youre faster than my LAN ;-)
Ive a hub, not swith, but its running at full duplex. All the NICs -laptop and desktop
PC, desktop PC runs fine- is running at full duplex too.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] root]# ifconfig
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:0B:DB:95:4F:0E
inet addr:192.168.9.5 Bcast:192.168.9.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:576754 errors:129661 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:12
TX packets:26460 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:124 txqueuelen:100
RX bytes:449850611 (429.0 Mb) TX bytes:2967621 (2.8 Mb)
Interrupt:11 Base address:0xe000 Memory:faffe000-fafff080
Its running at full duplex, but Ive thousand of errors!. Bad hardware?
But thanks for the aclaration of aplications that try to do large block transfers, it
gives me a tip about the hardware. Bad hardware?
Maybe a bad driver too, but I dont think so, because the speedy transfer with Apache...
Anyone with another idea?
Thanks and Regards,
On Wed, 2 Jul 2003 06:28:43 -0500
Ed Wilts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 02, 2003 at 01:10:58PM +0200, Pablo Rodriguez Gonzalez wrote:
> > If Im the client with my laptop, getting archives by FTP of the
> > server, the speed is always, always, around 170 kb/sc :-(
> >
> > If Im the server, the client machine get the archives from my laptop,
> > always around 170 kb/sc too :-(
> >
> > But more extrange!!. If a runs an Apache on my laptop, the client
> > machine get the archives from my laptop at 7-8 Mbytes/sc, a normal
> > speed.
> >
> > Only happens with the FTP protocol!!!. And it happens being client and
> > server!!!. If I use another client/server on my laptop, the result if
> > the same... :-(
> >
> > Problem of my network?. Not. With Apache the speed is OK.
>
> Actually, it might be a problem. I've seen more than a single case of
> weird things like this happening, and they've turned out to be a
> misconfiguration - you may have a switch that is set for full duplex but
> the NIC is set to half duplex or the other way around. Force both sides
> on. Usually the applications that suffer are those that try to do large
> block transfers - I've seen it with both FTP and NetBackup.
>
> --
> Ed Wilts, Mounds View, MN, USA
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Member #1, Red Hat Community Ambassador Program
>
>
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--
Pablo Rodriguez Gonzalez
Director General
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
iProyectos Desarrollos Tecnologicos
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