Just built a HTPC and hooked it up to my desktop through my second gigabit port. I'm able to share files and internet but i was wondering about transfer speeds. I'm only able to get up to maybe 30-35 megabytes/second (280mbit). Shouldn't i be closer to the 1000mbit capacity of the cards? I realize other things come into play here (chipset, bus speeds) but i thought i'd get a little faster transfer speeds on newer machines.
7/23/2008 11:30:33 AM
Harddrives typically can only do about 30-35 MB/s depending on what kind of data you're reading/writing. The only way to increase this would be to run a RAID in both computers.
7/23/2008 11:49:50 AM
Yeah i was thinking the HDDs might be the limiting factor.
7/23/2008 12:10:28 PM
copying files through windows file sharing is inherently slow too. I've seen transfers go twice as fast over a LAN using FTP compared to windows file share.
7/23/2008 3:18:27 PM
Shit, on Windows 9x it was quicker to FTP files from one HDD to another in the same machine than it was to use windows copy. I'm not sure if xp/Vista has fixed that, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's still faster to use FTP locally. Windows copy = teh suq.
7/23/2008 3:20:47 PM
Yeah i've been hearing if i want to make the fastest media server just use a linux box for storage because it handles file transfers so much better than windows. It's just i want Vista on the HTPC for media center and gaming. I'm not really complaining about 35megabytes/sec, just wondering why it's not faster. Wouldn't the HDD's be the biggest limiting factor?
7/23/2008 3:30:11 PM
get you some raptor's and call it a day
7/23/2008 3:30:22 PM
You might want to make sure you're using CAT6 cable too if you want maximum performance.
7/23/2008 3:33:04 PM
^yeah true it's only 5e but i heard that shouldn't matter as much. Not that big a deal because everything will just be played over the network to the HTPC.
7/23/2008 3:41:13 PM
7/23/2008 3:45:17 PM
^i know the bottleneck isn't the gigabit cards. It's more to do with the chipset, express bus, windows limitations, and HDD limitations.B is Byteb is bit8 bits in a byte. Transfer speeds are usually shown in bits, and sizes are usually shown in bytes.
7/23/2008 3:55:26 PM
yea, the cable isn't the issue, cat5 can do gigabit, it's just not optimized for it, 5e should be just finemy guess is it's OS overhead and hard drive limitations, could be network drivers as well.
7/23/2008 5:04:19 PM
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7/23/2008 6:00:27 PM