09-29-2015 09:55 PM - edited 03-08-2019 01:59 AM
Hi folks. I have a 3750 as my primary switch to the uplink and sub-switches, 2950s.
I have a Dell PE 610 connected on one of the 2950 switches that's crawling on download speeds. Tested by wget on a few Centos mirrors.
My output for the VLAN is below
Fa0/6 connected 98 a-full a-100 10/100BaseTX
I tried also speed 100, full duplex, etc. I'm not sure why it's crawling. I'd appreciate help troubleshooting this.
Everything else on the 2950 seems ok from what I see.
09-29-2015 10:08 PM
why do you think its the port? where you downloading from? what else is in the path? is it withing the same subnet?
09-29-2015 10:16 PM
I'm not sure where the culprit it, whether the NIC on the server, the port on the switch.
I tried about 10 different Centos.org mirrors from the U.S. All under 1Mbps, despite the switch speed being 100.
What should, or would be the optimal settings for a VLAN for performance? For whatever reason, when I put duplex auto, it always shows up as a-full instead?
09-29-2015 11:37 PM
The way to test it, If you suspect a port issue, is to set up an FTP server and client on the same switch and the same vlan. and see what through put you get when you pump a file across. Meanwhile you will need to do a sh int fax/y and check the 5 minute input or output rate.
if your port is at 100 full, just should theoretically be able to get close to that speed.
if your throughputs are OK in this scenario, you will need to go up into the OSI layer. or perhaps put your FTP client/server each on a separate switch. then go across a Layer 3 boundary etch.
09-29-2015 11:42 PM
Do you know why it shows a-full for duplex instead of auto when I do duplex auto?
What would be the optimal setting for duplex on 100mbit uplink?
I'm trying another port # to see if it fixes it. Maybe a bad port on the switch.
09-30-2015 03:48 PM
even though you set a device to for instance auto auto, when you do sh int x/y it will show what has been negotiated.
when you run cisco devices, you can safely leave auto/auto on and it will negootiate the highest possible settings.
uplinks, so point to point connections: will always need to run fullduplex. because you cannot get collisions on a p2p link.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide