> I mean Mega as in 1000000. 100Mbps Ethernet should be equal to
> about 12500Kbytes/sec which is equal to 12.5Mbytes/sec. 94.93Megabits/sec
> doesn't equal to 100Megabits/sec.
12.5 Mbytes/sec on the wire *is* 94.93 Megabits/sec application to
application using TCP - that's what I'm trying to say. You'll never see
12.5 Mbytes/sec application to application - look up the Ethernet frame
formats to see why (1460 bytes of TCP payload is 1538 bytes on the wire).
> > I've measured 94.87 Mbps myself on full duplex 100BaseTX (back to back
> > with a crossover cable or through a switch). This is close enough to
> > the "speed of light" that I see no point in trying to improve on it...
>
> Yeah but what's the transfer rate you get?
94.87 Mbps, application to application, using ttcp. Using Mega = 1000000,
that should be 11.86 MBytes/sec.
Oh yeah, this was measured with FreeBSD, with a P-133 on the receving end,
back in '96 :-)
Steinar Haug, Nethelp consulting, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message