On Jan 31, 2:27pm, AZ_Pete wrote: > I just finished upgrading my home network to 100Mbit. I installed 10/100 > cards in all my machines (2 Windows boxes and 3 Linux boxes) and installed a What kind of cards do you have? > new 10/100 Hub. However, when I FTP files to the any of the Linux boxes the > upload speed isn't any faster than when I was running only 10Mbit cards, the > transfer speed indicater in the application shows the same transfer rate. > Also, when I start my VNC session against my Linux box, the refreshing of > the KDE screen is not any faster either. Once you get it working, you should notice a difference. You'll notice an even bigger difference after you use it for a while and are all of a sudden forced to go back to 10Mbps for a while. (This recently happened to me when my power supply died on my Netgear switch. I used an old 10Mbps hub until I was able figure out something for a replacement power supply. > When I copy files between the two Windows machines, the process is a LOT > faster than before. This indicates that the Windows machines are talking to > each other at 100Mbit, but the Linux machines still seem to be at 10Mbit. > The hub shows all machines linked at 100Mbit. Use ftp on some large files and see what it reports the transfer rates as being. E.g... ftp> put 7.0-i386-powertools.iso local: 7.0-i386-powertools.iso remote: 7.0-i386-powertools.iso 227 Entering Passive Mode (192,168,2,7,135,219) 150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for 7.0-i386-powertools.iso. 226 Transfer complete. 614799360 bytes sent in 59 secs (1e+04 Kbytes/sec) ...which is about right for a 100Mbps link between the machines. > Is there some way I can tell if the cards in the Linux machine are actually > receiving/transmitting at 100Mbit? Sometimes the 10/100 cards have an LED which indicates whether it's running at 10Mbps or 100Mbps. Also, take a look at the boot messages. E.g. in one of my /var/log/messages* files, I see the following: 3c59x.c:v0.99H 11/17/98 Donald Becker http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers/vortex.html eth0: 3Com 3c905B Cyclone 100baseTx at 0xf880, 00:50:04:6e:1c:e8, IRQ 9 8K byte-wide RAM 5:3 Rx:Tx split, autoselect/Autonegotiate interface. MII transceiver found at address 24, status 786d. MII transceiver found at address 0, status 786d. Enabling bus-master transmits and whole-frame receives. > Is there a setting I must activate for Linux to utilize the new 100Mbit > connection? Some drivers may have a way of enabling the speed (media) at module loading time. E.g: See Documentation/networking/vortex.txt in the kernel sources. (The options listed in your file may not work for your card since I don't know what kind of card(s) you have.) Also, take a look at the "media" option of the ifconfig command. Kevin