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Forum Discussion
phil060506
Feb 01, 2024Guide
RN528X ethernet bandwidth
I would like to speed up transferring data to and from my RN528X and note that it has two 10Gbe port. I currently have it linked to my LAN via a 1gigabit switch so can't get more than 112 Bps transf...
- Feb 01, 2024
Yes, you could consider creating a LAG (LACP or static) from two Ethernet ports on your NAS. This requires a configureable switch at least, to configure the two ports as a static LAG or LACP LAG - otherwise there willl be some massive loop condition on your network.
StephenB
Feb 01, 2024Guru - Experienced User
phil060506 wrote:
I would like to speed up transferring data to and from my RN528X and note that it has two 10Gbe port.
How many simultaneous clients are accessing the NAS?
The LAG idea from schumaku can deliver better throughput if you have several clients reading or writing simultaneously. But it won't do anything for you if you mostly have one client accessing the NAS at a time.
Moving on to multigig. If you have just a few clients accessing the NAS at the same time, then multigig will give better results than a LAG (even if you are using ordinary gigabit for the clients).
The NAS cannot negotiate 2.5G or 5G - so it's either 1G or 10G. But you can connect it to a 10G port on a Multigig switch. 10G ports are expensive, so a reasonable strategy is to use 2.5G for most (or all clients). Keep in mind that you will need CAT6 cabling for 10G. Cat 5e is ok for 2.5G and 5G.
One inexpensive option on the switch side would be to get a QNAP QWS-2104-2T. This has two 10G ports and four 2.5G ports. Amazon US price is currently around $140. You could then connect one 10G port to the NAS. You could connect one PC to the second 10G port, and other devices to the remaining 4 2.5G ports.
There are also some inexpensive 9 port multigig switches with eight 2.5G ports and one SFP+ port. You could also get one of those, but you would need to add a 10GBASE-T SFP+ to RJ-45 transceiver for the NAS. You can find these switches for about $100 on Amazon, the transceiver adds about $40. So they are about the same price as the QNAP switch, give you more 2.5G ports, but only one 10G port.
Netgear doesn't have any similar multigig switches anywhere close to this price point.
The client side is a bit tricky. There are several inexpensive 2.5G USB-C adapters. There are a couple out there that advertise higher speeds, but they often don't deliver the speeds they claim. If you have a laptop, then I'd suggest getting one of the 2.5G ones, and see if anything new comes along that is faster later on.
If you have a desktop with an unused PCI-E slot, then you can pick up a 10G Base-T card for around $80 US.
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