> On Tuesday, October 21, 2003, at 01:03 AM, Emmanuel Gravel wrote: >> Now, to start with, 2.8MB/s is better than what I'd get at 10Mb/s but >> it's not quite as fast as I expected it to be. But the other side of >> the >> equation is pretty bad. Both cables between the computers and the >> switch >> are the same, they're fully molded, factory quality, I got them when I >> purchased my first (10Mb/s) hub. Network cards are Kingston KNE100TX >> on >> the Windows system, and Intel EtherExpress 100's for the Linux system >> (two, the Linux system is my firewall). Obviously all transfers of >> those >> sizes are done on the internal IP's only, and using an FTP client on >> Windows (push/pull). >> >> Does anyone know how I could trace the issue and resolve it? Have you tried just using a Linux FTP client? The discrepancy in speed can't be explained by anything in the transport layer so I'd hypothesize that the problem is a bug in the FTP program that makes uploads (from the POV of the Windows machine) slow. Then I'd test my hypothesis by trying a different client and running the transfer from the other end.