On 9/8/07, Ross S. W. Walker <rwalker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Has the Internet interface reached it's max capacity? No. > Or are you saying that LAN-to-LAN traffic maxs out at 10Mbps, it is > a little vague. LAN-to-gateway traffic (e.g., a test FTP of a large file from the gateway to a machine on one of the LANs) begins to degrade as the LAN-to-internet traffic increases. That's not surprising, but it degrades disproportionately, i.e. when the FTP begins to show intermittent stalls, the total traffic visible at the router on the internet side of the gateway is only in the just-over-10Mb/s range. Once we get to this point, no matter how many more LAN-to-internet connections become active, the router on the internet side never sees much over 10Mb/s of traffic. We're not losing data or having an unusual number of connection timeouts; each connection just slows down. We figured on some slowdown for NAT, but not 80%+. LAN-to-LAN traffic that doesn't involve the gateway behaves more like we'd expect, but I'm not sure that eliminates the switch as the culprit. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos