memilanuk
Occasional Visitor
Hmmm... didn't think I'd have to go down this road so soon, but I need some help getting the speed up on my network.
At the one end... Buffalo Airstation WHR-HP-G54 router/gateway. It's connected to the local fiber provider via PPPOE via the WAN interface, provides 802.11G wifi w/ WPA2 security, and has an Ethernet cable running from one of the ports of the built-in switch to a Netgear XAVB2001 HomePlug AV 200 adapter.
At the other end... about 10-12 feet as the crow flies, but down a floor and over a bit... another Netgeare XAVB2001 adapter feeds a Linksys 5-port 10/100 switch via the 'uplink' port. Connected to the switch are two older PCs... one a Linux box for testing and the other is my FreeNAS box. The FreeNAS box has an Intel D945GTP mobo, 2.6GHz cpu, 2GB RAM, and three 500GB SATA drives in a RAID-Z1 configuration shared under /mnt/storage/.
Currently I have my Macbook plugged into a port on the Airstation under the premise that wired ethernet should be faster than 802.11g wifi. Using Filezilla I am copying over my iTunes library to the server via sftp. The files range from ~3-6MB (songs) to ~50MB (music videos) to ~500MB (tv episodes) to ~1.5GB (HD tv episodes).
According to the graph on the FreeNAS admin page, its currently swinging between 2-11MB/sec, and just eyeballing it... averaging about 5-6MB/sec. Looking at iStat on the Macbook... it's showing between 200-1200 KB/sec, hard to tell what 'average' is. When Filezilla is transferring one of the bigger HD files, it shows two sftp connections running at around 280-300kb/sec each. At this rate... transferring the ~60GB of music and videos from the Macbook to the server will take overnight, at least. Transferring the 260GB iTunes folder from my desktop PC... does not even bear thinking about.
So far as I can tell... both Homeplug adapters are plugged straight into the wall, not into any kind of surge suppressor. I don't see anything that looks like an AFCI bkr in the main panel downstairs, which would lead me to start wondering if the problem might be interference from some other source (such as the cell phone charger mentioned in the article). The question is... how far away should I be looking for potential sources of interference? Other outlets in the room? The next room? Across the house? In the garage?
Any other ideas would be most welcome. After seeing the results in the various HomePlug articles (looks like average of mid 40MB/sec for one stream) it seems like I should be getting a lot more speed than I am. Granted, it could be something else besides the HomePlug connections... but either way, I need to find it and get it under control!
TIA,
Monte
At the one end... Buffalo Airstation WHR-HP-G54 router/gateway. It's connected to the local fiber provider via PPPOE via the WAN interface, provides 802.11G wifi w/ WPA2 security, and has an Ethernet cable running from one of the ports of the built-in switch to a Netgear XAVB2001 HomePlug AV 200 adapter.
At the other end... about 10-12 feet as the crow flies, but down a floor and over a bit... another Netgeare XAVB2001 adapter feeds a Linksys 5-port 10/100 switch via the 'uplink' port. Connected to the switch are two older PCs... one a Linux box for testing and the other is my FreeNAS box. The FreeNAS box has an Intel D945GTP mobo, 2.6GHz cpu, 2GB RAM, and three 500GB SATA drives in a RAID-Z1 configuration shared under /mnt/storage/.
Currently I have my Macbook plugged into a port on the Airstation under the premise that wired ethernet should be faster than 802.11g wifi. Using Filezilla I am copying over my iTunes library to the server via sftp. The files range from ~3-6MB (songs) to ~50MB (music videos) to ~500MB (tv episodes) to ~1.5GB (HD tv episodes).
According to the graph on the FreeNAS admin page, its currently swinging between 2-11MB/sec, and just eyeballing it... averaging about 5-6MB/sec. Looking at iStat on the Macbook... it's showing between 200-1200 KB/sec, hard to tell what 'average' is. When Filezilla is transferring one of the bigger HD files, it shows two sftp connections running at around 280-300kb/sec each. At this rate... transferring the ~60GB of music and videos from the Macbook to the server will take overnight, at least. Transferring the 260GB iTunes folder from my desktop PC... does not even bear thinking about.
So far as I can tell... both Homeplug adapters are plugged straight into the wall, not into any kind of surge suppressor. I don't see anything that looks like an AFCI bkr in the main panel downstairs, which would lead me to start wondering if the problem might be interference from some other source (such as the cell phone charger mentioned in the article). The question is... how far away should I be looking for potential sources of interference? Other outlets in the room? The next room? Across the house? In the garage?
Any other ideas would be most welcome. After seeing the results in the various HomePlug articles (looks like average of mid 40MB/sec for one stream) it seems like I should be getting a lot more speed than I am. Granted, it could be something else besides the HomePlug connections... but either way, I need to find it and get it under control!
TIA,
Monte