Recommended Posts

I am looking to purchase a NAS solution for backing up several computers in my house and was wondering what the community thought about using Link Aggregation for the connection or USB 3.0. I did some research and even though my Netgear WNDR 4000 comes with a USB 3.0 port, people report very slow speeds supposedly because of NTFS formatting, but even without the formatting the speeds are still under 2.0 standards. Also, I would like storage above 2TB and that is not natively supported. I do have DD-WRT firmware installed on it though, but have not found if it can support 2TB+ drives.

So, on paper USB 3.0 seems great, but in real life it appears horrible. Any suggestions?

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1132706-link-aggregation-or-usb-30-for-nas/
Share on other sites

So you think you need more than gig? Or linking multiple 100mbit ports? Does this nas your looking to buy support that? You can move some serious speed across a gig connection. Unless you talking backup of ssd to ssd I don't think the gig wire is going to be your bottle neck.

Any nas you buy I would think would have gig, and gig switches are cheap.. And if you have to update nics in your other boxes, again cheap..

I see 70 to 90MBytes per second over gig without any issues.. And that is on CHEAP ass hardware to and from a VM ;) Would 90MBytes per second not be fast enough for your backups?

TBhonest if you are already looking at Link Aggregation you would be better off building a home server rather than a throwaway nas box.

Dual port gig cards are ridiculously inexpensive these days because Broadcom NetXtreme II has gone EOL Ie 5 for $59.99 bucks online.

I get 180MB/s down from a NC380T on a Windows 8 client to 2 NC380T's on the server.

There are loads of these cards using the Broadcom BCM5706C chipset HP,Dell etc HP's have the best software IMO.

Usually with cheap NAS devices from the likes of Netgear get horrific transfer speeds because of crappy software or bad RAID controllers. You would be much better off with a better quality NAS or just build your own file server. Many people on Neowin recommend QNAP.

Wow, lots of options out there, but USB 3.0 is certainly out of the question. QNAP looks appealing although I am also looking into BURP and FreeNAS. Budman, I always considered my network to be the bottleneck and probably incorrectly as you are correct that 1gb should be sufficient, but it's a bit too close to comfort for me. I know I will rarely if ever use more than 1gb of bandwidth, but I do know I will feel more comfortable with 2gb.

And you are running ling aggregation now, you have nics that allow bounding? How are you getting 2gb?

So lets do some math, lets say you got some ok nics and see 900mbits on the wire with these.. That is roughly 112MBps -- do you have have HDD that can sustain that in read and write? 112 puts you pretty high up on the charts for drives benchmarks

http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/hdd-charts-2012/-01-Read-Throughput-Average-h2benchw-3.16,2901.html

So I would love to see the iperf tests of your network btw.. Tpreston can you post your iperf results for your setup??

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • No kidding, Tim, we've been running low on memory for a while now... get your head out of the Apple pixie dust cloud and come back down to earth with us peons.
    • It's really pathetic that an MMA video game triggers your political rage...
    • Nvidia GeForce NOW gains support for seven more games as discounts continue by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe There's a brand-new update rolling out to Nvidia's GeForce NOW streaming service, and like every week, that means more games have received support on the platform. This week's drop has additions like Aphelion and Pro Cycling Manager 26 attached to it. Don't forget that the GeForce NOW summer sale is still active too. This limited-time offer drops the 12-month Performance membership from $99.99 to $64.99, saving members $35. At the same time, the 12-month Ultimate membership is currently going for $129.99, dropping the price by $70 from the original $199.99. Moreover, Nvidia reiterated that support for GOG single sign-in and game library is incoming this summer, joining stores like Steam, Ubisoft Connect, Battle.net, and Xbox. "Connect supported game store accounts and stream titles with GeForce RTX power. Games that include cloud-save functionality help keep progress intact across devices," added the company. "Start a game on one screen, pick up where playtime left off on another, and spend less time managing installs and storage space." Here are the games joining GeForce NOW's supported list this week: Embers of the Uncrowned Demo (New release on Steam, available 13) Pro Cycling Manager 26 (New release on Steam, available June 15) Aphelion (Steam) Citizen Sleeper (Epic Game Store, Free from June 18-25) Megastore Simulator (Steam) OPERATOR (Steam) Super Meat Boy 3D (Xbox, available on Game Pass) Keep in mind that, unlike subscription services like Game Pass or EA Play, a copy of a game must be owned by the GeForce NOW member (or at least have a license via PC Game Pass) to start playing via Nvidia's cloud servers. There is also a limit to how many hours subscribers can use the service per month, with extra time being purchasable in chunks.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Harris Gilbert earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      534
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      167
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      70
    4. 4
      neufuse
      64
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!