3.7 Mbit is about 450Kb/s. You should be able to get around 600kb/s in
big transfers.

But the ballpark figure is about right. The problem is the architecture
of the devices that basically incur a 1 ms delay once in a while to read
registers, which is a separate USB transfer which takes >= 1ms.

Performance tuning will be done at some stage, but at the moment
stability is more important. The host scheduling errors are still not
handled properly for example.

Nick


On Sat, 26 Feb 2000, Mikko Työläjärvi wrote:

> 
> Seeing that -current now supports USB network devices, I got a Linksys
> 100TX "dongle".  Question is: what kind of speed is reasonable to
> expect with this thing?
> 
> Some unsophisticated tests show that I get around 3.7 Mbit/sec under
> FreeBSD, and about 5.5 Mbit/sec under Windogs98.  This is on a Toshiba
> Portegé 3110CT (has a UHCI controller).  The "fxp" device that comes
> with the machine can transfer over 8Mbit/sec over the same network (a
> fairly idle 10 Mbit segment).
> 
> Is this as good as USB networking gets?  Ok, I know that USB won't
> handle more than 12 Mbit, but right now it does not even reach one
> half that).
> 
> At least the USB adapter is more comfortable for laptop use than the
> big ugly "docking station" thingie containing the fxp NIC :-)
> 
>        Just curious,
>        /Mikko
> 
>  Mikko Työläjä[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  RSA Security
> 
> 
> 
> To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]                                          USB project
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