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Author Topic: Transfer Speeds  (Read 16184 times)

Clayton

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #15 on: June 26, 2011, 11:31:54 PM »

Tried transferring from my laptop with GB LAN and now getting around 20.5 MB/second, found this post on Google about my NIC card in the Dell Precision T3400

"May be the motherboard and LAN architecture are not designed properly. the basic concept of any onboard device is that, it uses bus arbitration. it is the technique to use the system bus as per the interrupt so as to avoid collisions if any as system bus is shared by all the devices connected to a computer system. this is a clear hardware issue. the dell motherboard's architecture is somewhere not supporting LAN architecture. the best solution is to use PCI ethernet adapter untill dell improvers the motherboard architecture!"

So am going to buy a PCI or PCI-E GB LAN card and give that a try.
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JavaLawyer

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #16 on: June 27, 2011, 05:25:18 AM »

It looks like you've found a partial solution, but the numbers are still below the typical low end for your GB connection.
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skrupka

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #17 on: June 27, 2011, 09:11:45 AM »

I'm also using a dedicated PCI network card (Belkin) I found that the speed was faster than my mainboard adapter.   Maybe using 9000k Jumbo Frames will get you close to 25 MB/s which is the speed I get copying to the NAS.
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JavaLawyer

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #18 on: June 27, 2011, 09:23:52 AM »

I'm also using a dedicated PCI network card (Belkin) I found that the speed was faster than my mainboard adapter.   Maybe using 9000k Jumbo Frames will get you close to 25 MB/s which is the speed I get copying to the NAS.

From my understanding, on a GB network connection, the throughput should fall between 25 to 35 MB/s.
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skrupka

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #19 on: June 27, 2011, 10:55:05 AM »

From my understanding, on a GB network connection, the throughput should fall between 25 to 35 MB/s.

Yes, exactly as i quoted in the thread earlier I get 25 MB/s upload and 35 MB/s download from the NAS.  Did you read the whole thread JavaLawyer? Or are you just stating that I've reached optimal transfer speeds? Because what you posted earlier is that you only know the speed you get on a 10/100 Ethernet connection, are you privy to new official facts from D-Link? You stated there is a difference in speed between operating systems i.e XP to Windows 7.  That doesn't seem to be the case.
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JavaLawyer

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #20 on: June 27, 2011, 12:23:47 PM »

Yes, exactly as i quoted in the thread earlier I get 25 MB/s upload and 35 MB/s download from the NAS.  Did you read the whole thread JavaLawyer? Or are you just stating that I've reached optimal transfer speeds? Because what you posted earlier is that you only know the speed you get on a 10/100 Ethernet connection, are you privy to new official facts from D-Link? You stated there is a difference in speed between operating systems i.e XP to Windows 7.  That doesn't seem to be the case.

There is a known issue some users with Windows 7 PCs are experiencing where transfer rates drop well below 5 MB/s. The root cause and resolution are unknown.

As far as the GB data threshold I stated in my last post, I recalled reading transfer speed discussions on the DNS-323 forum a year ago and revisited those threads to refresh my memory. Hardware wise, the DNS-323 and DNS-343 are essentially the same device, save the extra two HDD ports. That said, the throughput on the DNS-323 and DNS-343 should be the same. The throughput numbers I quoted were the approximate range measured by DNS-323 users who tested the transfer rates for their particular devices.

Another point to be noted: The DNS-323 outsold the DNS-343 many times over, so the DNS-323 user base is much larger and consequently there are many more threads posted on transfer speeds and other issues than you'll find here. The DNS-323 forum is a good resource for issue resolution.
« Last Edit: June 27, 2011, 12:36:59 PM by JavaLawyer »
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Clayton

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #21 on: June 28, 2011, 03:30:41 PM »

Finally got around to installing a PCI GB NIC, but I now can not access the NAS nor via the web interface but I can access everything from my laptop, strange!!
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Clayton

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #22 on: June 28, 2011, 04:06:49 PM »

I've figured out why it wasn't connecting, the NIC driver settings had a maximum jambo frames setting of 7000 set and the NAS was set at 9000, so I changed the NAS settings to 7000 and tested the transfer speeds, wait for it....................... now I am getting around 2.5MB/second worst off than before.
I'm using a Realtek PCI GBE Family Controller, my laptop is using a Intel Gigabit Controller, so I might buy a Intel NIC controller and see how that goes
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seattle web guru

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #23 on: October 09, 2011, 08:10:08 PM »

Its not your NIC or machine. Its more likely the NIC on the DNS343. I have had the exact same problem for months. 4 computers, all the same. I spent sooooooo much money replacing routers this year, cause thats what everyone says it is... It is not.
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Locster

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #24 on: November 30, 2011, 02:40:43 PM »

I'd resolved myself to accept a transfer speed between 6 and 10MB/s regardless of OS or connection type. The reasoning I'd heard was that the processor on the 343 was not powerful enough to do RAID5 calculations fast enough to saturate the unit's 1Gb NIC.
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blairblends

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #25 on: January 02, 2012, 12:51:10 AM »

I went through this sort of struggle about a year ago, and let me tell you what I found out (if this helps).

I felt like I should be getting faster than the speeds I was, because I could copy to my MacBook, for example, at speeds of like 75 MB/s with no issue.  For the NAS, read would peak in the 20s, write would never go over 10 to 12.  I felt like something was off...

So, I went out and got a new gigabit switch and a gigabit card for my machine (making my whole network gigabit).  All link speeds at 1Gbps.  Great!

I put the settings on the DNS-343 and computer to match with the JUMBO packets, then did some speed tests.

Things had improved to where reads (depending on the size of the file) often peak around 30-45 MB/s (megabytes per second).  My write speeds still hover around the 10 MB/s rate.

The long and short of it is that the DNS-343 just isn't the fastest unit out there.  Having now scanned the posts in this and other forums, I can tell you that once you get into that 30ish MB/s range for reads, you're in the top tier.

I'm still not EXACTLY sure why writes are so slow (and reads are sort of a "C-" grade), but I'm sure someone can explain.  For me, it's really not much of an issue since I'm patient and I just use the NAS for backups.  But still, I'm a curious geek.

That's just my experience, hope it helps.
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JavaLawyer

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #26 on: January 02, 2012, 05:06:04 AM »

blairblends - Thank you for sharing your throughput metrics. I have similar performance on my two DNS-343s. The throughput ceiling appears to be a bottleneck related to the DNS-343 hardware rather than LAN topography/configuration. My DNS-343s are configured as Standard Volumes. Users who use RAID 5 may experience a slight further drop in throughput due to the overhead carried by RAID.
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kenfong

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Re: Transfer Speeds
« Reply #27 on: January 05, 2012, 06:17:39 PM »

I am running 7x64 systems with the following results:
write to 343: 25MB/s
read from 343: 35MB/s
based on 1G wired network.

I had slow transfer rate (5MB/s) when started using 343 even with 1G wired network. I found out 343 need to configure to use JUMBO frame (9K). I had to change my network card to use JUMBO frame as well. (I purchased a new network card which allow me to configure the JUMBO frame feature.) Furthermore I found out my 1G router is part of the problem as well. It could not handle JUMBO frame. So I added a better switch, and my 343 and PC are on connected via the switch instead of the router.

hope this will help.
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