On Mon, 23 Oct 2006, Jeff Mohler wrote:
Well..the right way to do this is with a switch that can etherchannel
the NICs together, im not sure if Fbsd can do that..of course.
FreeBSD supports EthernetChannel, 802.1ad, etc. So does NetBSD. I's LACP
that needs work.
Are nic1 and nic2 on the same network?
Are client2 and nic2 on the same network?
Need a bigger picture with some detail.
On 10/23/06, Albert Shih [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all
I've two NIC on my server.
Until now I just use one. I want use the second interface to increase
perfs.
The
Le 23/10/2006 à 13:09:21-0800, Jeff Mohler a écrit
Are nic1 and nic2 on the same network?
Are client2 and nic2 on the same network?
Yes all in same subnet, all connected on the same gigabits switch.
and all nfs traffic is in UDP.
Hi all
I've two NIC on my server.
Until now I
Well..the right way to do this is with a switch that can etherchannel
the NICs together, im not sure if Fbsd can do that..of course.
But..are you really peaking out at 100Mb/sec with your existing NFS
architechture that you need a second pipe?
If you're not, I doubt a second pipe would speed
On Oct 23, 2006, at 3:40 PM, Albert Shih wrote:
Le 23/10/2006 à 13:09:21-0800, Jeff Mohler a écrit
Are nic1 and nic2 on the same network?
Are client2 and nic2 on the same network?
Yes all in same subnet, all connected on the same gigabits switch.
The easiest thing is to set up a
Le 23/10/2006 à 13:43:58-0800, Jeff Mohler a écrit
Well..the right way to do this is with a switch that can etherchannel
the NICs together, im not sure if Fbsd can do that..of course.
I don't think so (it's basic switch).
But..are you really peaking out at 100Mb/sec with your existing NFS
On Oct 23, 2006, at 4:15 PM, Albert Shih wrote:
For answer Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC [EMAIL PROTECTED] no I can't do
that
(well easy do..) because my client have only on NIC and the client
is XDM
server. And all my user-client (connected by xdmcp) is on same subnet.
It's very complicate