On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 11:16 AM, Kai Krakow <hurikha...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Am Tue, 28 Mar 2017 21:19:29 +0100
> schrieb Jorge Almeida <jjalme...@gmail.com>:
>

>
> I'm using a 400 MBps cable link here, directly connected, I can get 48
> MBytes/s out of it (which should be very close if not even little above
> 400 MBps), even when using the TP-Link as switch. If I use bridge mode
> and use TP-Link as router, it stop roughly around 300 MBps. My previous
> router even stopped at 30 MBps. It's a CPU issue. The internal CPU
> needs to do layer 3 routing. Layer 2 routing (switching) can be done by
> hardware. Login to your router and see how the CPU is loaded. Use top.
> If you still loaded it with its original hardware, you cannot do this,
> tho. Try OpenWRT (that is what I used).

You mean, check the % of cpu usage? It must be at about 100%, right?


>
> I think there's a database which contains throughput test results with
> different router hardware and different firmware. However, with a quick
> google search, I cannot find it. You may have more luck.
>
> [some moments later]
>
> I think it's here:
> https://www.smallnetbuilder.com/tools/charts/router/bar/180-lan-to-wan-tcp/31
>

I think I need wan-to-lan. Anyway, those numbers seem too good to be
true. 919Mbps with a $61 TP-Link AC1200? What would explain my poor
results?

Jorge

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