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I have a 50 megabit connection at home and a 1Gb connection at work, yet transferring files between home and the work servers is extremely slow, about 300KB/s, using HTTP FTP or RD.

What should I do to increase the transfer rate?

EDIT: My home connection is 50/10, however, I'm more concerned about downloads at the moment. The speeds I was talking about was only for a single file using those methods. My biggest concern is that clients will be getting those types of speeds from the servers as well so I may be looking in the wrong place for the problem.

EDIT #2: After taking the advice of many people here, I tested with iperf and it reported 3.03 MB/s transfer and 2.50Mbits/s bandwidth (I'm not sure what that means, since I'm not sure how transfer could be higher than bandwidth). However, assuming that I can transfer at 3MB/s what program / protocol would take advantage of that best?

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  • ...Do you own the business? Because otherwise, this sounds like a really bad idea... Mar 14, 2010 at 3:08
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    Is your 50Mb connection at home symmetric? Most aren't. I wouldn't be shocked to only see 4-5Mb upload.
    – MDMarra
    Mar 14, 2010 at 3:44
  • 4-5MB? Don't know where in the world you are, MarkM, but here in the UK, typical broadband upload speeds are only 448K - 1.5MB if you're extremely lucky and are close to the exchange. Mar 14, 2010 at 14:39
  • @Andy Shellam - Mb, not MB. 1-2Mb/s upload is pretty standard for lower speed broadband packages in the US, but with downspeeds in the 50s, usually the upload speed follows proportionally.
    – MDMarra
    Mar 18, 2010 at 11:49

6 Answers 6

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I have a 50 megabit connection at home...

Do you?

Every home broadband connection I've ever seen has severely capped upload speeds. As an example, I'm currently on 30 megabit downstream, but I'm capped at 1 megabit upstream.

Check your speeds at http://speedtest.net/ and see if you're seeing a similar asymmmetric setup.

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  • Not to mention that 50Mb is usually subject to a 50:1 contention ratio so worse case if the other 49 people sharing your equipment at the exchange also max out their connection, you're actually only going to get 1Mb. Mar 14, 2010 at 14:41
  • @Andy: this is not necessarily accurate, and varies based on connection type.
    – gekkz
    Mar 14, 2010 at 19:19
  • @gekkz - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contention_ratio - this is accurate for a "home broadband connection" (which is what the post was directed at) usually ADSL, in the UK. Mar 14, 2010 at 19:47
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This is slightly off your topic, but if you can handle background transfers, then use dropbox.net. Just drag and drop the files to transfer and by the time you get home, everything should be synced up.

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You don't say what methods you've tried, but if you haven't tried yet, use a client that can support several parallel transfers -- WinSCP (scp) and FileZilla (ftp) both support this. If you're trying to transfer a single file, you would need to split it up into several parts and reassemble once it's reached the other end.

If you're using Windows file shares (e.g., SMB) to connect the two machines, check out RichCopy -- the "File copy" value determines how many concurrent transfers will occur... try several values until you max out the throughput.

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/2009.04.utilityspotlight.aspx

You won't necessarily be able to saturate the connection it depends on how the routers are configured at both endpoints, not to mention every node in between.

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  • He did say "using HTTP FTP or RD". Mar 14, 2010 at 7:09
  • There's more than one FTP client, some are faster than others because they use features like parallel transferring,, others do one file at a time.
    – Dentrasi
    Mar 14, 2010 at 9:43
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It seems like you first need to measure the actual bandwidth available at home. Just because it says 50 megabit it doesn't mean you actually get to have it.

I recommend using a tool by the name of iperf to do the measurement. With iperf you can measure from say a "PC" at work to your "PC" at home. Google for tutorials and you will find them.

http://www.noc.ucf.edu/Tools/Iperf/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iperf/

Sorry if this fails to answer your question, but it's better to be informed. Like @MarkM said don't be shocked with the results.

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If you already have some old, obsolete version of the file that you're trying to download, then rsync (perhaps wrapped in the pretty Unison GUI) can make transfers finish much faster.

The rsync doesn't change your bits/second goodput; but it saves me a lot of time by only downloading the parts of a file that have actually changed.

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Not much you can do about your network speed except pay for more if it is available. You can certainly decrease the bytes on wire by compressing the files before sending using a gzip, bzip, lzma, or the like. some file transfer algorithms like rsync can do compression. If you compress the files before sending then it will not help. rsync will only transfer file differences so if you have an out of date copy you can save some bytes.

I hope this helps.

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