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Tibonhomme
Sep 10, 2024Tutor
RN102 slow performances
Hey there !
Just found out an old RN102 that seem to work, I'm trying to set it up 🙂
I am surprised however as it seems too slow compared to the expected capabilities.
I've been trying to upload different files to test it's speed, and i seem to be stuck at ~9 MB/s
I obtained this value by two different means : Trough the windows explorer (using the network), and trough the web interface.
I am not directly wired to the internet from the computer, I have a mesh wifi installed. So the computer is in wifi but the NAS is directly wired. I tried to speedtest my internet connection from the computer and got 145 mb/s for the download and 135 mb/s for the upload, so I would expect at least 15MB/s for the NAS (if im not wrong).
My HDD is entirely knew and is a 7200RPM connected with SATA that should give me at least 220 MB/s. I tried replacing it with a slower and older one but got about the same transfer time.
The NAS Version is 6.10.10
Could someone help me please ? Am I thinking this wrong ?
Many thanks !
Kev'
Tibonhomme wrote:
it is set right now to 1 Gb/s and not 1 GB/s, could that be the problem ?
No, this is correct.
- B is Bytes
- b is bits
so 1 gigabit per second.
You can't set this in the NAS, it is negotiated by the NAS and whatever device it is connected to.
Tibonhomme wrote:
All right I see, but wouldnt that mean the reading speed should be significantly higher ?
It depends on the details.
With SMR drives, the tracks are so close together that when you write to track X, you overwrite X+1. Periodically there is extra space (separating the platter into zones).
So when you write to track x, the drive firmware needs to
- read track x+1
- write track x
- read track x+2
- write track x+1
- ...
until it reaches the end of the zone.
These drives do have a large cache, and they will re-order writes to try to minimize the amount of "rippling" that is needed. But at some point the cache isn't enough, and the performance can become glacially slow (often a lot slower than what you are seeing in the test).
Even when the cache is sufficient, there often is a lot of background "rippling" that needs to be done after your writes finish. Even though that is done in the background, the extra seeks can also slow read speed.
The 15 MB/s speeds you measured are equivalent to about 120 Mb/s (8 bits per byte). That is about the internet speed you measured with Speedtest.
Was this last test done with the PC connected with ethernet? If so, was the ethernet directly connected to the same mesh element as the NAS? Or were you using the mesh wifi backhaul?
15 Replies
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What model hard drive?
Have you checked the link speed of the NAS ethernet (either using ssh or looking at the connection in your router)?
Have you tried a different ethernet cable?
- saudadeLuminary
Also consider the read/write speeds of the drives. Are you uploading a single large file or many small ones?
Is the NAS connected directly to a mesh unit, or through some other hub/switch? What category are the cables are you using?
- SandsharkSensei
"Slow" in what way? The 102 and 104 are the most CPU and RAM limited of the OS6 native NAS and >10 years old. So they are slower than most.
Sandshark wrote:
"Slow" in what way? The 102 and 104 are the most CPU and RAM limited of the OS6 native NAS and >10 years old. So they are slower than most.
Tibonhomme says ~9 Mb/s transfer speed.
Not sure if that is for large file transfers or a lot of small files though. If it is when transfering > 1 GB files then something is definitely wrong.
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