Anyone have any guesses? 10GBase-T has been around for a while now and it's only a matter of time.
			
			Entire backups of multi-TB drives?
Not uncommon for me, personally.
True but with a much greater emphasis on "media streaming" and sharing other large files, it would definitely be a huge improvement.
Most people with large files have them on mechanical drives which can't do much more than 100MB/s sustained.
1Gbit gives you pretty much enough bandwidth to max out your typical single mechanical drive for transfers A->B
Reviving old thread.
When can we start seeing 10gbit ethernet Routers and integrated motherboard chipsets that support 10gb ethernet?
gigabit internet is becoming more prevalent, Home users are transferring large amounts of data on home networks, (nas systems)
I can saturate my home 1gbit ethernet network plenty when transferring back and forth with my NAS, and also streaming plex etc.
It is here. There is a nice Netgear 10Gbe switch for only about 100 a port.
Yeah...talk to me when the price is down to $20 per port and a 10GbE NIC is less than $100.
Or heck, I'd even take $30 a port and less than $150 for a 10GbE NIC.
Most people with large files have them on mechanical drives which can't do much more than 100MB/s sustained.
1Gbit gives you pretty much enough bandwidth to max out your typical single mechanical drive for transfers A->B
Windows 8/8.1. Multiple GbE NICs. Call it a day. SMB3 + SMB Multichannel works a treat.
I'd love to see 10gb become affordable. Not just nics, but switches. They are still in the $10k+ range though last I checked. Would be nice to use 10g for servers so NFS speeds can be improved for VMs and such. gig is good enough for the rest of the stuff for now.
I realize this post is over a year old, but I would like to point out that with NAS becoming more and more common, and with HDD with 1TB platters being pretty standard we're seeing 150+MB/s from HDDs, it isn't particularly difficutl to max out 1GbE with just a single HDD, let alone half dozen in a NAS.
And at the rate we've seen 10GbE crawl along, we very well might have SSD technology evolved to the point to where it can supply affordable mass storage, and by then 10GbE will likely be a bottleneck.
Its a solution, but certainly not an ideal one. It can be great for a server that sees frequent, simultaneous requests from multiple systems on the network, but if you want each client machine to achieve those speeds that means you need additional NICs for all those machines, additional wiring, and a managed switch...and while its certainly a good deal more affordable than 10GbE, it can easily add up to a hefty amount, plus come with a lot more hassle.
12 port 10GbE switch @ ~$1600:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...9SIA24G15Y1174
but even with the relatively affordable ~$150 10GbE NIC you can scrounge up on Ebay, its still priced well outside the range of the average consumer.
Not available in Canada. And... it's a netgear. it's going to die in a few months.![]()
New pull Mellanox MNPA19 (Single-port 10Gb Ethernet) are available on eBay for <$60For direct connect this is a great option, as you can build a direct link between 2 boxes for less than $150 (2 10Gb cards and some twinax between them).
10Gb switches are definitely still a while away from affordable to the masses though![]()
I realize this post is over a year old, but I would like to point out that with NAS becoming more and more common, and with HDD with 1TB platters being pretty standard we're seeing 150+MB/s from HDDs, it isn't particularly difficutl to max out 1GbE with just a single HDD, let alone half dozen in a NAS.
And at the rate we've seen 10GbE crawl along, we very well might have SSD technology evolved to the point to where it can supply affordable mass storage, and by then 10GbE will likely be a bottleneck.
Its a solution, but certainly not an ideal one. It can be great for a server that sees frequent, simultaneous requests from multiple systems on the network, but if you want each client machine to achieve those speeds that means you need additional NICs for all those machines, additional wiring, and a managed switch...and while its certainly a good deal more affordable than 10GbE, it can easily add up to a hefty amount, plus come with a lot more hassle.
12 port 10GbE switch @ ~$1600:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...9SIA24G15Y1174
but even with the relatively affordable ~$150 10GbE NIC you can scrounge up on Ebay, its still priced well outside the range of the average consumer.
Managed switch not need. You can do it as a direct connection or through an unmanaged switch. In fact if you do link aggregation on the switch and thus also teaming on the server/client SMB Multichannel will NOT work (at least not on Windows 8/8.1. It may work on Server 2013. Not sure).
I agree it is a less than ideal solution, but it is generally a cheap one in a low client count environment or one where you only have one or two clients that need to be able to handle a lot of data to a server and everything else's requirements are sparse. It also does a lot of what teaming will do, so it IS a solution for just a server that needs to have multiple requests if you don't want to get a managed switch (which semi-managed switches are stupid cheap, so that shouldn't really be an issue).
In my setup that is very true, its really just my desktop that I care about having a very fat pipe. Everything else is fine with GbE or wireless right now and my RAID arrays have trouble pushing 2GbE to its limits these days since they are getting rather full.
My replacement setup I have in mind could probably push 3GbE near its limits though and I don't have the runs to do that.
10GbE would be VERY nice. However, just pointing out that if you need/want more than 1GbE right now and can't afford 10GbE, then there is a workable solution to exceed 1GbE, at least so long as you don't mind working in a Windows environment (for SMB/CIFS anyway).
Wow, I didn't realize they were that cheap. You'd still need a couple of SFP+ adapters to go in, though I know those are fairly cheap. I wonder what kind of power budget that Mellanox card has?
At any rate, it wouldn't work with my current setup as I have no fiber run between my desktop and server. Just a pair of Cat5e (which should support 10GbE just fine, it isn't an excessively long run, but it IS through closed up walls).
Though maybe a SFP+ 10GBase-T adapter in those cards so I could do it over copper. Hmmm. Though that looks it ups the cost to about $140 per machine. Still not bad though. I might have to give it some thought. Though I don't know if I have the spare slots in my desktop (I do in my server). To bad no 4x PCI-e 2.0. I've got one of those free in my desktop.
