Hello! I'm sorry for replying so slowly. I missed the email notification!I have just tried a completely default install of 22.7 and get:~1000 Mbps down~150 Mbps upBack to the Synology router and I get:~1000 Mbps down~1000 Mbps upUnfortunately I haven't had time to try iperf across the NUC.
Additional to what @zan said. Try to change the tunnables. PPPoE behavies wierd.OVerall your CPu should be able to do 1G on Single core without problem. However you are using a NUC, NUC usually has only a single onboard NIC.Can you tell what NUC do you have?How did you expand your NIC count?What kind of adapter did you use?Is that adapter okay?Do you see any errors on the Interface that has the adapter?Regards,S.
I can't speak to the PPPoE but they stated in the OP that the NUC they're using has dual i226 2.5g NICs. Not all minis are single NIC machines.
top -PSH
How do you have the NUC connected? Is it set to 1g on each side? Correct.Also, are you actually seeing 1000 Mbps or are you rounding the 900ish gig limit? 900 is the average over most tests. For the first few seconds I can see up to ~1300. I guess the ISP is then throttling.
Real life got in the way for a bit but I'm now back trying to get this working.Both interfaces on the NUC are definitely set to 1Gbps. I believe the brief speed test results of 1300 are a glitch caused by the way the sites are calculating the average. It seems to be particularly common with fast.com. The final result on these test is always ~900.The network arrangement is:Fibre -> ISP modem -> NUC -> Netgear switch -> PCI normally run the Synology RT2600AC in place of the NUC, which is giving me close to line speed. When the NUC is in place instead of the RT2600AC, the upload becomes slow. Restarting the modem doesn't appear to make any difference.During upload, top shows 20-30% on all 4 cores for kernel(if_io_tqg) and speed is ~150Mbps.During download, I get ~10% on all cores for kernel(if_io_tqg) and speed is ~900Mbps.
How are you setting them to 1g? Are the modem and switch ports 1g or something else?As mentioned previously, what happens if you just use two local PCs with the NUC between them? Try an iperf between the two. You can also test iperf from your computer to the NUC.I saw some commentors "fixing" their i225/i226 problems by putting a switch between the modem and their router. Apparently some devices just don't agree with the cards.One last thing you can try is loading Windows, Linux, and FreeBSD on the NUC and comparing the various iperf results to what you get with OPNSense.