08-16-2012 02:49 AM
Dear forumers,
I'm configuring two SG-300 switches at the moment, and I'm trying to connect them with two cables.
I've set up the LAG like this (on both switches):
And a got the following result:
This means my connection is at only 1 Gbit/sec, or everything is OK I'm at 2 Gbit/sec?
At the moment I can not preform a test with many computers copying at the same time and check the total speed. How can I make sure that the LAG's speed is more than 1 Gbit/sec?
Best regards,
Ádám Ráksi
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08-16-2012 10:14 AM
Hi Adam,
There isn't really a particular way to measure There are some software tools that can measure traffic such as IPERF.
The LAG works in such a way it will negotiate the link speed. Each physical port can't exceed 1g so it will show 1g. However, as you already know, the LAG joins multiple physical ports to a port group that will 'combine' the ports to increase the speed using a load balance algorithm.
A lot of times physically measuring a LAG throughput is very difficult because the file transfer needs to be really huge to reach the port group potential.
-Tom
08-16-2012 10:14 AM
Hi Adam,
There isn't really a particular way to measure There are some software tools that can measure traffic such as IPERF.
The LAG works in such a way it will negotiate the link speed. Each physical port can't exceed 1g so it will show 1g. However, as you already know, the LAG joins multiple physical ports to a port group that will 'combine' the ports to increase the speed using a load balance algorithm.
A lot of times physically measuring a LAG throughput is very difficult because the file transfer needs to be really huge to reach the port group potential.
-Tom
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