SnowDrifter Posted April 28, 2021 Share #1 Posted April 28, 2021 Still learning networking. Need a quick hand here on how to implement stuff Have 10 gig nics in the mail Switch has 2x 10g ports, 8x 1g ports 1 10g port goes to my computer Another will go to the nas On the nas side, I'll have a second 10g port available, along with 2x onboard 1g So..... What do I do with the extra connections? Plug them into 1g on the switch and bond? Or would that be apt to cause issues with 10g+1g? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
asheenlevrai Posted April 28, 2021 Share #2 Posted April 28, 2021 If you plan to connect your PC to your NAS using 10GbE via a 10GbE switch, I don't see any reason to add a redundant slower connection (1x 1GbE or bond of multiple 1GbE). It would not allow the PC to connect to the NAS via the slower connection. It would allow the NAS to connect to the LAN (and web) via both connections, maybe... So it could be some kind of a redundant connection in case your NAS 10GbE NIC fails? I mean, if the switch fails there are no longer any functional connection anyways... I may be completely wrong, though. I'd be interested to read other replies to your question. Best, -a- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnowDrifter Posted April 28, 2021 Author Share #3 Posted April 28, 2021 1 hour ago, asheenlevrai said: IIt would allow the NAS to connect to the LAN (and web) via both connections, maybe... This is pretty much where I'm at and where the question stems from Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
asheenlevrai Posted April 29, 2021 Share #4 Posted April 29, 2021 One thing is for sure is that it doesn't make any sense to bond 1GbE connections except if you have multiple clients that need to access the NAS at 1GbE each. In your case, local clients would probably(*) go through the 10GbE and potential clients outside your LAN would have their bandwidth limited by your internet connection anyway. (*)I don't know how incoming connections are managed when multiple Ethernet connections are available. This is an interesting topic, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnowDrifter Posted April 30, 2021 Author Share #5 Posted April 30, 2021 (edited) On 4/28/2021 at 11:37 PM, asheenlevrai said: One thing is for sure is that it doesn't make any sense to bond 1GbE connections except if you have multiple clients that need to access the NAS at 1GbE each. In your case, local clients would probably(*) go through the 10GbE and potential clients outside your LAN would have their bandwidth limited by your internet connection anyway. (*)I don't know how incoming connections are managed when multiple Ethernet connections are available. This is an interesting topic, though. Also nothing that bonding 1gbe is helpful if I'm say... Transferring to/from the nas, and the nas is doing anything out to the internet. Plex stream, cloud backup, torrent.. yadda yadda. Single 1gbe connection is pretty uber bottleneck. It'd be cool to have a 10gig connection direct to my computer + 1g for whatever else would need it outside (gigabit internet) but again... Not sure how it's handled within the system and if having a goofy bond setup like that would be more detrimental than helpful. In a perfect world, I'd have 3... 10gbe to my computer 1gbe to the switch to handle other machines on the network (primarily streaming / smaller file syncs) 1gbe to the router for going out to the internet. Then theoretically, any bottlenecks would be the result of my hardware, and not interfaces. But if that would work remains a mystery Edited April 30, 2021 by SnowDrifter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IG-88 Posted April 30, 2021 Share #6 Posted April 30, 2021 11 hours ago, SnowDrifter said: 10gbe to my computer 1gbe to the switch to handle other machines on the network (primarily streaming / smaller file syncs) 1gbe to the router for going out to the internet. as you are using 918+ please keep in mind that its default config will only support 2 nic's you should change synoinfo.conf before adding a card with two more ports mentioned here: https://xpenology.com/forum/topic/21663-driver-extension-jun-103b104b-for-dsm622-for-3615xs-3617xs-918/ -> https://xpenology.com/forum/topic/12679-progress-of-62-loader/?do=findComment&comment=92682 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnowDrifter Posted May 1, 2021 Author Share #7 Posted May 1, 2021 23 hours ago, IG-88 said: as you are using 918+ please keep in mind that its default config will only support 2 nic's you should change synoinfo.conf before adding a card with two more ports mentioned here: https://xpenology.com/forum/topic/21663-driver-extension-jun-103b104b-for-dsm622-for-3615xs-3617xs-918/ -> https://xpenology.com/forum/topic/12679-progress-of-62-loader/?do=findComment&comment=92682 Nice thanks Got them pre set. Now if the mail would hurry up! Also still uncertain about the bonding behavior Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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