wkearney99
Occasional Visitor
I've need to install several 5 & 8 port switches and I'm a bit puzzled about how mixes of 100 and 1000 mbps traffic is handled. I've read that a few of the lower end switches on sensing 100mbps traffic will downgrade all switch throughput to that speed. The link to/from the client devices on the ports remains gigE but actual speed through the switch drops down. Assuming a gigE uplink, of course. Sort of negates the point of having a gigE uplink or client connection if everything's going to get throttled.
So my question is has anyone experienced this and if not then what make/model switches are you using?
The scenario is multiple devices in locations not served by enough wire back to the rack for each device. As in, printers, desktops, etc. Whenever possible I prefer to keep the numbers of hops across a given network to a minimum. Specifically avoiding stuff like chaining multiple low port-count devices together, but replacing them with higher-density switches instead. But I'd prefer to avoid throttling a pair of gigE desktops just because a 100mbps printer is connected to the same switch.
That and what's the low-down on managed vs unmanaged for small port count switches? I ran across some netgear units claiming 'unmanaged+', supposedly with some rudimentary traffic prioritizing features. Any experiences pro/con with them?
So my question is has anyone experienced this and if not then what make/model switches are you using?
The scenario is multiple devices in locations not served by enough wire back to the rack for each device. As in, printers, desktops, etc. Whenever possible I prefer to keep the numbers of hops across a given network to a minimum. Specifically avoiding stuff like chaining multiple low port-count devices together, but replacing them with higher-density switches instead. But I'd prefer to avoid throttling a pair of gigE desktops just because a 100mbps printer is connected to the same switch.
That and what's the low-down on managed vs unmanaged for small port count switches? I ran across some netgear units claiming 'unmanaged+', supposedly with some rudimentary traffic prioritizing features. Any experiences pro/con with them?