I'm using an Intel X550-T2 card, very expensive.
The Realtek is unused.
Brodey
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 24, 2024, at 23:51, Aaron Mason <simplersolution@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Try a different NIC rather than what appears to be an onboard Realtek
> NIC. Realteks are pretty craptacular - it's my understanding that they
> basically offload everything to the OS which means it raises an
> interrupt whenever a butterfly sneezes, hence the high CPU usage under
> load.
>
>> On Mon, Nov 25, 2024 at 7:54 AM Brodey Dover <doverosx@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> It's a fairly hefty system for a router.
>>
>> After updates speeds are up to 750down/1200up. When testing the download speed, all cores are stuck ~33%. When testing the upload speed, one core rockets to 100% and the others are around 20%.
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Brodey
>>
>>> On Sun, 24 Nov 2024 at 15:25, Stuart Henderson <stu.lists@spacehopper.org> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 2024-11-24, Brodey Dover <doverosx@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> --000000000000b205f70627ac962e
>>>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>>>>
>>>> Hello all!
>>>>
>>>> I have an OpenBSD 7.2 router that I have PPPoE passthrough configured to my
>>>> ISP's Fibre modem on its 10G switch. I have a Moker 2.5G switch that is
>>>> connected to that and my router has an Intel X550-T2 NIC. Everything
>>>> negotiates just fine. I was using ADMZ previously but there is a technical
>>>> issue (I think with routes)...so I'm back to trying out PPPoE passthrough.
>>>>
>>>> I'm currently getting 400-600Mbps down and about 200Mbps higher on the
>>>> upload. This is on a symmetrical 3Gbps connection.
>>>>
>>>> Should I upgrade the router and hope for the best?
>>>
>>> dmesg might give some idea about what sort of speed would be reasonable
>>> to expect from the hardware.
>>>
>>>
>
>
> --
> Aaron Mason - Programmer, open source addict
> I've taken my software vows - for beta or for worse
>
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