But I'm only using the Windows 10 file transfer dialog box as my measurement. I see peaks at about 140-150MB/sec combined from both devices. When I have the aggregation turned on (I only activate it on the NAS), I am able to sustain a 10GB file transfer to the PC at about 100MB/sec while the surface transfers the same file, concurrently, at 30MB/sec. I'm using Balance-alb aggregation (although I think Balance-tlb might be better). The NAS has two 1Gbps NICs connected to the GT-AC5300. A PC, which is wired to the GT-AC5300 with 1Gbps ethernet and a Surface that is wireless on 5gHz at 866.5Mbps. Testing this configuration has been a bit more difficult than I thought it would be. May 14 11:23:52 kernel: ^[[0 33 41mBLOG ERROR blog_request :blog_key corruption when deleting flowfor net_p=ffffffc02434b010 May 14 11:22:23 kernel: ^[[0 33 41mBLOG ERROR blog_request :blog_key corruption when deleting flowfor net_p=ffffffc0213186f0 May 14 11:14:29 kernel: eth3 (Ext switch port: 2) (Logical Port: 10) Link UP 1000 mbps full duplex May 14 11:14:28 kernel: eth4 (Ext switch port: 3) (Logical Port: 11) Link UP 1000 mbps full duplex May 14 11:14:26 kernel: eth3 (Ext switch port: 2) (Logical Port: 10) Link DOWN. May 14 11:14:25 kernel: eth4 (Ext switch port: 3) (Logical Port: 11) Link DOWN. I'll do more testing tonight and post results. I didn't have to make any changes to the GT-AC5300 other than making sure I was using Ethernet ports 5/6 (which doesn't appear to make to "ext switch ports" properly). All I had to do was make the configuration changes on my QNAP TS-470 PRO. I think everything is running well, except I don't think the router is handling file transfer cancel requests properly (every time I cancel a transfer you'll see the error). I just set up my NAS for "port trunking" (I wish everyone used the same term for 802.3ad).
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