Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

ian___

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 29, 2023
2
0
This is perhaps one of the strangest networking problems I've encountered.

On either of my home Macs (M1 Max 14" on 12.6.3) and my Mac Studio (M1 Max 13.2) I am experiencing a bandwidth clamp in only one direction and only when accessing the Internet. Local traffic is fully capable of saturating the 10gbe link between the switch in my network closet and my home office.

Switches are all Mikrotik with 10gbe SFP+ cages, flow-control is enabled on all ports.

Here is an example - iperf3 local traffic using the built in 10gbe adapter in the Mac Studio.

Downstream: 9.02gbits/sec
Upstream: 8.92gbits/sec

As you can see, this is a full speed high quality link. I've performed the test over a multi our period and had no dropped packets or issues at the switch level. Fwiw, Windows works as expected in any direction to or from any host on my PC using a Intel Killer 2.5gb adapter. Same applies for Linux using a 10gbe Aquantia card.

Let's perform the same test using the built in Mac Studio 10gbe, but this time target the NYC Fios iperf3 server.

Downstream:2.32gbits/sec
Upstream: 110mbits/sec

This test (downstream) works as expected and is very fast. Let's do the same test on downstream data.

Here's where it gets very strange, same test on the Mac Studio using a Plugable USB-C 2.5gbe adapter.

Downstream: 151mbits/sec
Upstream: 2.20gbits/sec

Somewhat confoundingly, it's reversed. This adapter works just fine on the MacBook Pro, providing expected speeds in both directions. The behavior is the same on the Mac Studio no matter if the adapter is plugged into a thunderbolt port or a usb-c port. Strangely, if I use a Sonnet Solo10g on either computer, the problem is the same.

I thought it was maybe a negotiation issue with the SFP+ cage, or the cable, or any of the physical link layer -- I tried them all using Windows and Linux and performance was as expected.

Things I've tried otherwise:
  • Jumbo frames while pulling all other non jumbo frame capable devices off of the network. No change.
  • Flow-control on/off.
  • Changing TCP window size - I have Linux configured to 4mb and it works perfectly, no change in MacOS.
  • Every possible combination of Autonegotiation on/off, flow control on/off, energy efficient ethernet on/off
  • Every possible combination of speed testing utilities and websites, all with the same results.
Anyone have any ideas? I'm officially stumped.

Edit: of course as soon as I post I have a minor breakthrough. If I force the Mac Studio 10gbe card or the Solo10g to negotiate at 2500base-T the problem goes away. Obviously this is less than ideal.
 
Last edited:

Bigwaff

Contributor
Sep 20, 2013
1,957
1,285
I know this is an odd question but your Mac Studio wouldn’t happen to be connected to a Studio Display? There are threads discussing how connecting a Studio Display will impact Ethernet performance of certain adapters. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
 

ian___

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 29, 2023
2
0
Interesting idea, though no it isn’t. Neither is the MacBook.

Forcing the negotiation to 2500baseT is a strange one. I may try another brand of sfp+ cage and try again.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.