HI
As far as I can tell, WiFi is nominal speed, not designated speed
Another dominating factors for that would be USB connection type, hardware bus 
connections, motherboard design, direct processor lanes to where

Wifi is what it is, never as good as hard wired 100mb/1000mb or even 10gb 
connections

Best
T 

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-m...@openbsd.org <owner-m...@openbsd.org> On Behalf Of Joel Carnat
Sent: 27 September 2020 22:43
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Issues with TP-Link UE300

Hi,

I have plugged a TP-Link UE300 on my ThinkPad X260 running OpenBSD -snapshot 
and it seems I can't get more than 100Mbps.

The dongle attaches and get an IP address. But the speed seems limited.
Same behaviour when attached to the USB3 port of my APU4D4 (running 6.7).
When plugged in a MacBook Pro (running macos), it gets Gbps speed.

I have noticed that it gets attached to cdce0; I thought the RTL8153 chipset 
would give me an ure0 device.

Is this expected?
Is there something I can do to get Gbps out of this device?

Thanks for help,
Jo

--
OpenBSD 6.8 (GENERIC.MP) #85: Sun Sep 27 13:39:51 MDT 2020

cdce0 at uhub0 port 15 configuration 2 interface 0 "TP-LINK USB 10/100/1000 
LAN" rev 3.00/30.00 addr 4

# doas usbdevs -v                                                               
   
Controller /dev/usb0:
addr 01: 8086:0000 Intel, xHCI root hub
         super speed, self powered, config 1, rev 1.00
         driver: uhub0
addr 02: 8087:0a2b Intel, Bluetooth
         full speed, self powered, config 1, rev 0.01
         driver: ugen0
addr 03: 5986:0706 SunplusIT Inc, Integrated Camera
         high speed, power 500 mA, config 1, rev 0.12
         driver: uvideo0
addr 04: 2357:0601 TP-LINK, USB 10/100/1000 LAN
         super speed, power 64 mA, config 2, rev 30.00, iSerial 000001000000
         driver: cdce0


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