Re: Linux Optimize

2000-08-30 Thread Leonard den Ottolander
Hello Carlos, > How can I make linux fly on network IO. I have a 3com905c and latest kernel, but > the mest I can get is > 80 megabits per second in a 100 megabits presecond network. You should be glad your network card is listening once in a while to see if another has somethi

RE: Linux Optimize

2000-08-30 Thread Ward William E PHDN
ut in the 70%s for sustained bandwidth and the low-mid 90%s for peak. Bill Ward -Original Message- From: John Aldrich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2000 6:30 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Linux Optimize On Tue, 29 Aug 2000, Carlos wrote: > How can I ma

Re: Linux Optimize

2000-08-29 Thread Carlos
Thanks for your email John, You are right that is not bad, if the speed stays consistent. this are the best results I have seen so far but sometimes speeds drop very much. I must have consistant tests for my supervisors. Do you know if there is a bug that can cause this kind of results or prhaps

Re: Linux Optimize

2000-08-29 Thread Bret Hughes
Carlos wrote: > How can I make linux fly on network IO. I have a 3com905c and latest kernel, but > the mest I can get is > 80 megabits per second in a 100 megabits presecond network. AFAICT that is flying Bret ___ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PR

Re: Linux Optimize

2000-08-29 Thread John Aldrich
On Tue, 29 Aug 2000, Carlos wrote: > How can I make linux fly on network IO. I have a 3com905c and latest kernel, but > the mest I can get is > 80 megabits per second in a 100 megabits presecond network. > That's not too bad. Consider that every connection has a bit of overhead. I wouldn't compla

Linux Optimize

2000-08-29 Thread Carlos
How can I make linux fly on network IO. I have a 3com905c and latest kernel, but the mest I can get is 80 megabits per second in a 100 megabits presecond network. Please help ___ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/