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Date:      Wed, 13 Dec 2006 17:08:38 -0800
From:      Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com>
To:        "N. Harrington" <drumslayer2@yahoo.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How does one bond two interfaces together to share bandwidth?
Message-ID:  <168E6D20-A6E1-458B-A1A5-80BAFD20598F@mac.com>
In-Reply-To: <20061214010124.29818.qmail@web34502.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
References:  <20061214010124.29818.qmail@web34502.mail.mud.yahoo.com>

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On Dec 13, 2006, at 5:01 PM, N. Harrington wrote:
>  I have tried one way, however when I use it I seem to
> have an odd broadcast occuring on my switch. Such that
> I am seeing incoming traffic hit some other ports on
> the switch.  Can someone confirm if I am doing it
> correctly? Perhaps I have a switch issue?
> Do I also need to bond the ports together on the
> switch?

Yes, the switch would need to support Cisco's FEC protocol if you  
want to use ng_fec with it.

> Sadly the switch they are connected to does
> not support port bonding. Does that matter?

Yep.  In many cases, a single 100Mbs link does just fine, but if you  
need more bandwidth, you can pick up a gigabit NIC nowadays for not  
much.  Picking up a GB-capable switch is more expensive, but perhaps  
your existing switch might have one or a couple of GB ports...

-- 
-Chuck




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