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in CompleteFTP by (120 points)
I'm getting roughly 1mb/s transfers from my testing on the LAN with SFTP. I have disabled all but blowfish.

I would think that the transfer on a LAN should be somewhere in the 15-20MB/s range... I'm using filezilla as the client.

Are there any limitations on speed for the trial version or settings I haven't seen somewhere?

3 Answers

0 votes
by (162k points)
On a 100 Mbs LAN, you'll generally be lucky to get better than 10 MB/s for raw transfers i.e. plain FTP transfers, any client/server. Try CompleteFTP in FTP mode to get an idea.

Encryption means decreasing that by 90-95%, usually - say 500Kb/s.

1 Mb/s (120Kb/s) seems on the low side though - we'll run some tests on our LAN and get back to you.
0 votes
by (162k points)
Ok, I've got some figures from our 100 Mbps LAN. (which means max data rate of perhaps 15 MBytes/s is possible - bits to bytes).

Uploading to the server via SFTP is slower than downloading, but for larger files (e.g. 500 MB), I average about 1.9 MBytes/s, peaking at maybe 2.3 MBytes/s.

Downloading from CompleteFTP via SFTP I can get about double that, perhaps 4 MB/s, but peaking a bit higher.

In comparison for plain unencrypted FTP, I can get around 10-12 MBytes/s.

These are good results - the best I can get uploading with Filezilla to OpenSSH on Linux is about 0.75 Mbytes/s, and downloading is about the half the speed (0.4 Mbytes/s). OpenSSH on Windows via Cygwin is much slower, maybe 0.25 Mbytes/s upload, and slower again for download.

So on our 100 Mbps LAN, CompleteFTP outperforms OpenSSH by a very large margin (300%+) using Filezilla as the client.

PLEASE NOTE THOUGH - you need to set the logging level to Information or lower (e.g. Warning). Setting logging to All or Debug will generate loads of logging and totally kill performance.

Hope this helps ...
0 votes
by (162k points)
Just a note too that CompleteFTP supports zlib compression for SFTP - for text files you can easily get 95% compression, and of course transfers will then be very very fast.

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