Hi What exactly do you mean with high latency? Do you mean that it takes a long time to connect (anywhere)? There are a few precautions to follow with gigabit ethernet. 1. Only use CAT-5 cables. 2. To obtain highest possible speed on the LAN, use a Gigabit switch/hub/router 3. Make sure speed autonegociation is turned on. giving the blame to your nic is easy but 8 times out of ten it's not the culprit. Other devices on your network may be transmitting (broadcasting) a lot of giberish. Use network scan tools to find out what is happening, also check your messages log. Do a service network restart and then tail /var/log/messages -n 20 and see at what speed it came on Another thing you might want to check is how fast your dns server is responding. It is not unusual for "shady" providers to have quite a bit of lag on their dns servers. try pinging the ip address of one of the dns servers; look in /etc/resolv.conf for the addresses Tools like netstat and ethereal are your friend as well. HTH Andy On Saturday 29 October 2005 06:06, Dan Hensley wrote: > Since my first post about this got no replies, I'll rephrase. > > I am experiencing extremely high latency with my network interface. AMD > X2 64, Gigabyte K8N Pro-SLI, using the built-in gigabit NIC which I > believe is using the forcedeth driver. > > Transfer speeds are fine, but latency is ridiculous. Does the forcedeth > driver have known issues like this? Do I need to invest in different > hardware? > > I'm not sure how to test the performance of my NIC to try to > troubleshoot why this is so bad. Can someone point me in the right > direction? > > Thanks, > Dan -- Now listening to Top! Radio Live www.topradio.be/stream on amaroK Geek code: www.vlaamse-kern.com/geek Registered Linux User No 379093 If life was for sale, what would be its price? www.vlaamse-kern.com/sas/ for free php utilities --
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