Asymetric network speed question
David G. Miller
dave at davenjudy.org
Wed Jul 5 17:21:36 UTC 2006
Tim <ignored_mailbox at yahoo.com.au> wrote:
> On Tue, 2006-07-04 at 22:46 -0600, David G. Miller wrote:
>
>>> Could a bad cable cause this or is it the skge module on bend (spindle
>>> and mutilate both run CentOS 4.3 with the sk98lin module and iperf
>>> says the speed is about the same in both directions between them)? A
>>> bad cable seems odd given the speed is fine in one direction.
>>
>>
>
>It is possible to be a cabling issue. You could have a problem with its
>wiring for data in one direction (there's two pairs for each direction).
>
>Obviously you don't want to pull more cable through, but you can test
>with loose wire through the room between the machines. If that acts
>differently, try reterminating your other wire, one end at a time. I'd
>still suggest testing with another cable rather than just reterminating
>it. You eliminate the cable, itself, as a fault, that way.
>
>Swapping a NIC might be in order, too.
>
>
>
Did some patch cable swapping and the problem stays with the
workstation. I even put one of the "slow in one direction" patch cables
between the server and the wall jack and I get symmetric speed between
the server and the old PIII/733 box. I also swapped which wall jack the
workstation is plugged into to see if its the wire inside the wall. No
difference in behavior.
I guess next thing is to try a different NIC in the workstation and see
if its the NIC. The NICs were surplussed to me from where I used to
work so I can't complain too much if I have trouble with them. They
probably wouldn't have gotten rid of them unless there was a reason.
BTW, gigabit uses all four wire pairs in the cable. Just something to
keep in mind. Lots of folks have gotten used to 100BASE-T only using
two pairs.
Cheers,
Dave
--
Politics, n. Strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles.
-- Ambrose Bierce
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