I have no ability to do that. First, because I don't currently have CORE installed on anything and, second, because having OPNsense, the firewall and router for my house, running as a VM on SCALE with the QNAP card connecting to the modem means I don't plan to shut down or even reboot more than once or twice a year.Are you able to test it with CORE as well? Unlikely ti work, but who knows...
Presumably, it works as well as 10 GbE Aquantia NICs of the same family—that is, not reliably enough for some tastes.Are you able to test it with CORE as well? Unlikely ti work, but who knows...
As I've mentioned earlier in this thread, I'm no advocate for 2.5 gbe. I prefer 10 gbe and would rather use it. However, the only cable modems faster than 1 gbps are 2.5 gbps. In particular, there are no 10 gbps cable modems made by any manufacturer, at least based on my research. So, if you're using a NIC to connect to a cable modem, and your internet feed is faster than 1 gbps, as mine is (it's 1.25 gbps), then in order to take full advantage of the speed you're paying for, you absolutely need a NIC capable of connecting at 2.5 gbe.You're misreading the room. There's no "Intel only" policy. Chelsio and Solarflare NICs are also recommended—Chelsio possible even ahead of Intel. But no 2.5 GbE NIC is recommended—not even those from Intel.
10 Gig Networking Primer
This is a discussion of high speed networking for newcomers, with specific emphasis on practical small- to medium-scale deployments for home labs or small office users. It originated with a forum thread located here that has many pages of...www.truenas.com
Here are two:In particular, there are no 10 gbps cable modems made by any manufacturer, at least based on my research.
Why do you want to connect your NAS directly to the Internet provider box? You connect the box to a suitable switch, and operate your local network at 10 Gb/s for the most capable desktops and the NAS, 1 or 2.5 Gb/s for other clients and 2.5 Gb/s link to outside.So, if you're using a NIC to connect to a cable modem, and your internet feed is faster than 1 gbps, as mine is (it's 1.25 gbps), then in order to take full advantage of the speed you're paying for, you absolutely need a NIC capable of connecting at 2.5 gbe.
Here are two:
5302 XGS-PON ONT - EPSGlobal
Cost optimized 10 Gigabit X-Series ONT enables subscribers to enjoy bandwidth intensive multimedia services with leading-edge XGS-PON technology.www.epsglobal.com
The second is the one used by Telecom Italia (TIM) to serve 10 Gb/s fibre to end users.![]()
TIM Sagemcom 10 Gb
Schede tecniche e guide all'installazione del nuovo modem TIM Sagemcom 10 Gb: configura e collega tutti i dispositivi per la tua attività o della tua abitazione.www.tim.it
There are experiments (or maybe even deployments by now?) in France, Spain and the Netherlands. Sorry you're on the wrong continent…![]()
TIM Super 10 Gigabit in 10 città: costi e dettagli della sperimentazione XGS-PON Fibra FTTH
Dal 1° Ottobre 2021 TIM ha incrementato la copertura dell'offerta sperimentale XGS-PON in Fibra FTTH, TIM Super 10 Gigabit, adesso in 10 cittàwww.mondomobileweb.it
Why do you want to connect your NAS directly to the Internet provider box? You connect the box to a suitable switch, and operate your local network at 10 Gb/s for the most capable desktops and the NAS, 1 or 2.5 Gb/s for other clients and 2.5 Gb/s link to outside.
![]()
QSW-M2106-4S | 10GbE and 2.5GbE Layer 2 Web Managed Switch for SMB Network Deployment
The QSW-M2106-4S is a Layer 2 Web Managed Switch with four 10GbE SFP+ fiber ports and six 2.5 Gigabit ports. Supporting Layer 2 switching and network management via a user-friendly web user interface, the QSW-M2106-4S offers flexible deployment in hybrid high-speed network environments and...www.qnap.com
Most times you do not actually need 9000 MTU either.Hello,
in TrueNAS-SCALE-23.10.1.1 release there is bug in the kernel causing RTL8125 Ethernet adapters can't work with mtu 9000:
218187 – r8169: no carrier with RTL8125
bugzilla.kernel.org
So I have ordered I226 T1 2.5Gbps Ethernet adapter and I will test it with my setup, I'll post update here about results!
(boughts ASHATA 2.5Gbps PCIe Network Card, I226 T1 PCI E X1 Single Port Network Adapter, 2500/1000/100Mbps PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet Card, RJ45 LAN Controller)
This is your personal experience, which seems to be quite positive and I am happy for you that it is.I personally don't think Realtek is a really bad choice for home usage - though the manual udev patching for the usb 2.5 GBit Realtek in Linux is a bit annoying - but when it's done it works.
Billions yes, which the largest majority also run Windows.. which Realtek tend to work fine in because the drivers are more mature. Realtek under BSD is a whole other story and even under Linux Realtek has always been iffy. Yes, support has gotten better over I think the last year.. but it is not where it should be.Though on the other hand many billions(?) of computers have combined used Realtek chips for decades ...
A thousand reports of problems are still only ~ 0,0001%,... that would also be still "nothing" in terms of statistics - maybe so many perople have problems with Realtek because many (consumer) boards have them onboard?
Perfomance is probably a bit faster with Intel especially if you have a very low end cpu or very high loads all the time + high network traffic.
the 225 has some firmware bugs that cause issues, epsecially when using smb to transfer data. it's better to get a 226 or a x550 (but even the 550's have issues with link autodetect and 2.5gbe and 5gbe and require you to manually select the mode).No, Realtek sucks. Intel 225v Gen 3, or 226, are reported to be solid, at least as much as anything 2.5 GbE is.