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Well, there are other factors at play like the distance the files are being transferred, size of the buffers, buffer queuing protocol, packet size, TCP window size, etc. . . How many you can transfer at once will depend more on the size of your buffers than the bandwidth of your network. If you're wondering speed the files would move through the system (also ignoring all other variables), it would take 64 seconds to transfer an 8GB file over a 1Gbps network and 0.64 seconds to transfer It over 100Gbps.
Well, for starters if you are honoring TOS or COS values in the switch level all the way through, and if you are crossing vlans or subnets, if you has your QoS queues setup appropriately, then it doesn't matter.I have to do this for voice traffic all the time, or else volumes of traffic like this take out phone calls on your network. This is why if you have your packet marking and QoS honoring in the switch and router then the amount of data you are transferring is irrelevant. If you are dealing with a situation with no QoS, then the answer is never do parallel file transfer, but so them serially to avoid traffic bursting.
Quote from: another IT wizard friendWell, for starters if you are honoring TOS or COS values in the switch level all the way through, and if you are crossing vlans or subnets, if you has your QoS queues setup appropriately, then it doesn't matter.I have to do this for voice traffic all the time, or else volumes of traffic like this take out phone calls on your network. This is why if you have your packet marking and QoS honoring in the switch and router then the amount of data you are transferring is irrelevant. If you are dealing with a situation with no QoS, then the answer is never do parallel file transfer, but so them serially to avoid traffic bursting.Hopefully you understand what he's talking about...I'm afraid I can't translate...
If we did force the Math, is it just simple division to know how many files result from say Bandwidth = 1G, File size = 8GB? I'm sorry I'm old Obiwan nowadays when it comes to networking IT stuff. And sorry for the bother. Thanks and Godbless.Can you guys help me calculate it if it does involve a more complex formula?Clarification for 'breakdown":Break down = slow the network = negative impact to network performance = congestion etc all mean the sameThanks and Godbless.
In theory, you can put as much load on a network as you want, it will just get deathly slow
Quote from: Jonesy on June 29, 2018, 05:07:06 PMIn theory, you can put as much load on a network as you want, it will just get deathly slowSo this and other related consequences -- what then is the estimated number of 8B files pushed that will BEGIN causing slowdown, congestion, negative network performance? Ergo, what should be the max number of 8GB files that should be pushed maintain network integrity and efficiency?
Depending on how exactly your transferring them, maybe you could start small then gradually increase until you start to see performance issues.