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Synology slow for data transfer
I am transfering data to my Synology and it is really slow, less than a TB of data is taking more than 5 days....Did I mess something up. My synology is connected to my router via ethernet cable, and my mac is coping data from a USB external hard drive....Let me know if anyone has any ideas.
Could something be wrong on the setup? |
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#3 | |
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This seems to be moving faster now. Power died in my house so I needed to restart the data transfer. I switched the PC to Gbe and then switched the drive to firewire 800. Stuff is faster now. I will tell you that when i browse shares its coming up slow, however I think that is due to the 7 data transfers. The whole cpu is pegged on this. Rethinking the ds212 decision might have been worth the plus. Thanks, |
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#4 |
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Your router is the likely bottleneck. I can find no specs on it and assume it's the bog standard AT&T supplied device.
If it's a Homeportal 3000 then it's old & slow. 10/100 Ethernet, 802.11g both ancient. Your DS212 has GigE Ethernet, your router probably doesn't. Any recent Mac will have GigE and 802.11n If you can set your 2Wire Uverse to bridge mode and buy a modern router you'll see a large increase in throughput. I have a DS212j (economy) and it's not slow at all. |
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#5 |
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it's not the router - it's the switch in the back of the router
you can improve the cables, but it might not really be those either I have two synologies with LAG interfaces in a gigabit switch and I don't get more than 60 MB/S you can get a small/cheaper switch, you don't need to replace your router. just |
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#6 |
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I have a 2Wire 3801GHV or something router (AT&T Uverse), and a Synology NAS (212J ((Yeah, I should have gotten more bays
))). The $#!@$@#$ router is only 10/100, not Gigabyte. As a result, I rarely see transfer rates exceed 11 MB/sec, either from my Mac Mini or my W7 PC.I have been researching, and been told that if I plug in a Gigabyte switch I can get higher transfer rates. Either that, or I need a new router. I think all that is involved is Gigabyte switch into back of router, then all the devices that were (hard) wired into the router get moved to the Switch, then they can play with each other at higher speeds. Oh, and the right cables also, you won't see really high speeds without the correct cables, but others know more that me about that. |
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#7 |
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A GigE switch will only improve your wired speeds. Your WiFi speeds will still suck. An AEBS would improve the works.
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#8 |
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actually i believe the bottle neck is the hard drive themselves. no giga router or switch or cat 6 wires are going to go any faster.
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rMBP 2.6/16/512 and loving every second of it |
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#10 |
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exactly
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#11 |
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Is it your initial data transfer that's slow? If the unit is still doing its initial parity check after volume creation, that would make it quite sluggish. That said, I also have a uVerse modem/router and found the local speeds unbearable. I'm using an Airport Extreme has the connection that my entire internal network uses. Gigabit speeds rock..my DS411+II is getting up to 125MB read speeds
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2012 15" Macbook Pro 16GB RAM/256GB SSD; iPad 4 - Black; iPhone 5 - Black; Synology DS411+II NAS 12TB |
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#12 | |
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#13 | |
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• USB 3: 5 Gigbit/s max (ie. ~5000 Mbit/s, or ~500 MByte/s, or ~0.5 GByte/s). • GigEthernet: 1 Gigabit max (ie. ~1000 Mbit/s, or ~100 MByte/s, or ~0.1 GByte/s). That's via a wired Cat.5 cabled GigEthernet (ie. not Wifi) connection to your Mac, and you normally see only around 60-80% of the "max" speeds in reality, due to overhead. Hence, GigEthernet connection is just one-fifth (20%) of the USB3 speed, at best. Until we see "10GigEthernet" connections on our Macs (using Cat.6 ethernet cables), then USB3 (or Thunderbolt for that matter!) is likely not gonna happen in the Apple Airport devices, or most others. When that's gonna happen, is anyone's guess?
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•17" MBP 2.93GHz C2D/10.8.x M.Lion/8GB RAM/256GB SSD |Mac Mini 2.6GHz i7 QC/10.8.x M.Lion/16GB RAM/256GB SSD |64GB iP5 black/6.x |64GB iPad Mini wifi+4g/black/6.x |T.Capsule 2nd gen/1TB. •wiki:Apple. Last edited by jimthing; Mar 1, 2013 at 01:50 AM. |
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#14 |
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I don't know, but advice to anyone getting their house wired: pay the premium and get cat6 cable put in, not cat5e! Ub 10 years you don't want to have to pay for this **** all over again!
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#16 |
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I have the DS 212J and the 112J. They both work fine and I don't see any problems with transfer speed. My ethernet is all gigabit. My wireless is handled by 2 d-link access points at opposite corners of the house. My router is an AEBS (older generation). I have an Apple TC (first gen) but I use it exclusively for TM backups and I never rely on it as my only backup.
The up side of the DS212 is low power consumption. The down side is its ARM processor and (relatively) slow speed (compared to Synology's much more expensive Intel based units). It's a more than fast enough NAS drive when used with gigabit ethernet. hope this helps...
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-r0k Macbook Pro (late 2011) iPad mini iPhone5Got a scan to ftp scanner? Enable ftpd in Mountain Lion! |
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#17 | |
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#18 |
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Synology released a new version of their OS today that includes huge performance improvements. Their mirrors seem to be down under heavy auto download load at the moment haha, but try installing later and you should notice a good improvement. If not, something is affecting your network.
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2012 15" Macbook Pro 16GB RAM/256GB SSD; iPad 4 - Black; iPhone 5 - Black; Synology DS411+II NAS 12TB |
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))). The $#!@$@#$ router is only 10/100, not Gigabyte. As a result, I rarely see transfer rates exceed 11 MB/sec, either from my Mac Mini or my W7 PC.
Macbook Pro (late 2011)
Linear Mode
