1gbit/s, are you expecting a different answer some how?!
Good users get 60 MB/sec. to about 80MB/sec.
Under really rare conditions.
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If your application is testing network throughput, and you're getting 2-3Gb/s over Gigabit Ethernet and you're not using any type of link aggregation, your testing application is screwed up.
If you want accurate results, test with iperf instead.
If you mean LAN transfer in MB/sec. (B=Byte)
Depending on the hardware and TCP optimization.
Mediocre users get about 40-60MB/sec.
Good users get 60 MB/sec. to about 80MB/sec.
Under really rare conditions.
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131 x 8 = 1048Mb/sec. Real Giga.
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When an application says: "packet length: 150,000,000" you know the writer of the application has no clue what he's talking about. Performance testing is an art. If this guy can't get terminology right, I am sure he can't get the fine details of testing right. Use another application.
250 MB/s up and 400 MB/s down? When you ran your LAN speed test, what IP address are you reading sending to/receiving from? Did you type in the IP address of your own computer?
Any recommendations?
iperf is the best benchmark you'll get for free.
I read the help and it just said to choose a folder. I chose my documents. I assumed this was just asking where to put the test file.
What should I be putting in the destination box? The IP of a different computer on the network?
I know this is probably a really stupid question but I'm very new to all this and trying to sort out some problems I've been having with super slow speeds randomly on and off.
Here is an article about the program:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/224327/LAN_Speed_Test.html
In the image that guy did the exact same thing I did and chose a folder, but got a more realistic number.
What am I doing wrong?
According to other tutorials I found, such as:
http://www.ehow.com/how_6923783_test-lan-speed.html
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/lanw...ur-network-five-ways-to-measure-network-speed
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/test-home-network-speed-decipher-results/
The "Folder" you select is supposed to be on a Windows share on a second PC. This makes sense because in order for the test app to measure your LAN network speeds, it has to write a file over the network and then read it back over the network.
I think what you did was that you specified a local directory on your PC's hard drive, or more likely, a solid state drive, since you have read/write speeds of 250MB/s and 401 MB/s. But basically, your original test did not send any data over the LAN network at all.
The only reason I can think of why the pcworld tutorial showed realistic speeds is that maybe the guy ran the test on his laptop, so his test app measured the read/write speeds of his laptop hard drive, which isn't that fast.
That's right, although it would probably be easier to use the 2nd PC's name instead of IP. So, you enter something like this in your test app while on your first PC:Thanks a lot. Kind of feel like an idiot. I indeed do have an SSD so I guess I was just testing the speed of the drive.
Oops :'(
So I suppose I need to set something like that up on a second computer in order to do this test then.
I'll look into how to do on the google machine because I have no idea what I'm doing currently. I assume when I set up a share folder on that second PC that I use the local IP of that computer to access it. And enter that in the box where I was originally choosing my documents folder. (oops)
Those powerline networks can perform well below their rated speed if there is interference on the power, which there quite often is. It might not be anything to do with your router performance. It sounds like you have quite a complex network setup, it might be worth drawing that out so we can recommend some isolating tests that will determine which part is causing the issue.