![]() ![]() Routing functions require IP and/or MAC address tables. From what information he's provided to us, his network is absolutely NOT the issue here.Įdit : To add, At no point have I suggested his switch is Layer 3 capable. he's running ONE.The thing you missed in his post is that his HDD is currently pinned at 100% and THAT is the bottleneck in his description. He's not running 7 clients at the same time. OP's server will only be splitting it's OWN gigabit throughput between whatever clients are CURRENTLY using it. Even the crappiest D-link gigabit switch I bought 15 years ago can sustain full gigabit speeds across 8 ports simultaneously and it 100% cannot do layer 3. Source : I've been in IT for 25 years, I'm a sysadmin, and I literally just tested it for posterity. even a 15 year old router has the potential to be gigabit.Unless you specifically tell your device to provide only X% of your bandwidth to a specific port, ALL gigabit ports should simultaneously handle 1Gbps synchronous throughput. Since OP is on LAN, my original statement is correct.his router should be fully capable of gigabit LAN as any modern router today offers gigabit ports. A switch only broadcasts to the intended port.A managed switch of course has FAR more configuration available to it but shouldn't be doing any routing on a home network unless you're a homelabber, in which case, OP would know more about what he's doing here. ![]() An unmanaged switch is smarter than a hub but less configurable than a managed switch. That technology is NOT in use today in any remotely modern household. A hub is a dumb-switch that can allow collisions. Incorrect.Nothing today is configured as a hub. Be sure to reboot your computer after making the change. You could try disabling this option to see if it helps resolve buffering issues. In some rare cases, though, it can dramatically (and negatively) affect network speed (and more commonly occurs on Windows 7). This may be due to their real-time scanning having issues coping with the way that the transcoder constantly generates lots of very small video files for the streaming.įor windows: (Windows) Disable “Large Send Offload” (LSO) Driver Settingīy default, Windows makes use of “Large Send Offload”, which is a technique to improve network performance and is nearly always beneficial. Several users have reported that their anti-virus or anti-malware software has caused interference with transcodes. They also list anti-malware real-time scan as a potential issue: W/ that you should be able to determine either if the issue is server or client sided Less than 1.0 – the Server is unable to transcode fast enough Greater than 1.0 – the Server is able to transcode fast enough Exactly 1.0 – the Server is transcoding exactly in real-time You can find out whether this is the case by examining your Plex Media Server.log file that covers your attempt to stream. The interesting part is: Check the Transcoding Speed The content can’t be transcoded fast enough for the stream The network connection can’t support the requested streamĢ. This article of Plex Support maybe usefulġ. Please go to the relevant subreddits and support forums, for example: ![]() Build help and build shares posts go in their respective megathreads No referral / affiliate links, personal voting / campaigning / funding, or selling posts ![]() Welcome to /r/Plex, a subreddit dedicated to Plex, the media server/client solution for enjoying your media! Plex Community Discord Rules Latest Regular Threads: No Stupid Q&A: Tool Tuesday: Build Help: Share Your Build: Submit Troubleshooting Post Files not showing up correctly? ![]()
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