http://www.ubnt.com/edgemax#EdgeMAXhardware
http://dl.ubnt.com/Tolly212128UbiquitiE ... kroTik.pdf
what will you say?
Ubiquiti is famous for over-promising and under-delivering and I find latest hardware to be of much lower quality than previous generations (coming to think of it - it's the same with mikrotik). In any-case, competition is great and I'm looking forward towards cheaper mikrotik products.Yes, wondering about this too. Lower price of 1100AH series and Cloud Router for $1000?
Also, I'm wondering what they are not telling you. Ubiquiti wireless radios seem very interesting at first but when you want something as simple as having multiple SSID's, you can't do it. Multiple SSID's with different VLAN's is a must I would say in many situations, but their software just doesn't support it and no word on when it will. Not saying Ubiquiti is bad but Mikrotik has proven to be more versatile.
At this point all you can do is being cynical since. for one, product is not available, two, the test was commissioned so one product looks better than other.I don't get the negativity on here tbh . Competition is always good for the consumer . Who knows you might get a new hardware revision or hardware facelift on the 1100/1100AX series or perhaps get niceties like SFP's thrown on in the future from MTK ?
11, 12 and 13 ports are useless unless the router is located in a bomb shelter. In the network I have about 20 RB1100xx routers and in most of them mentioned ports are not working. on ~10 routers altogether I dont have port 11, as it does not exist.If you search the forums and MUM presentations you will find this about RB1100AHx2:
switch group 1 - include ether1-5, have 1Gbps up and 1Gbps down shared connection to CPU
switch group 2 - include ether2-6, have 1Gbps up and 1Gbps down shared connection to CPU
ether11 - direct connection to CPU - fastest port on the board, should always be used as backbone port
ether12,ether13 - PCI-E ports - connected to CPU via PCI-E bus (more resource demanding and not as fast latency wise as directly connected ports.)
So usual setup should be - ether1-10 clients, ether11 backbone port, ether12-backbone backup (ether11 and ether12 have hardware bypass functionality), and ether13 management port.
to get max number of 64byte packets you need to use less "expensive" ports and minimum number of ports. so for this test you should go ether11<--->any one of <ether1-10>
to get max throughput, first you should go for 3port test first (example ether11,ether6,ether1), if max 3Gbps is reached you can try to connect ether12
The 493G is definitely a router with 9 Gig-E ports. I'm not sure it is a 9 Gig-E router. (All trees are plants but not all plants are trees.)@lambert:
Maybe I have a wrong impression, but there are 9 independent individual gigabit ports on the 439G.
The switch chips are there to allow them to be optionally switched, and are bypassed by default.
So it is a 9 port router, not a 2 port router + a switch. Each of the 9 ports with its IPs, routes and so on.
I never used a 493, but the RB450G at least behaves like this: 5 individual Gb ports + optional HW switching between ether2-5.
Not 2 ports + switch.
You are probably right. But even if that internal interface is capable of more than 1 Gb, the CPU will still be the bottleneck....
If the packets traverse the CPU, they will be bottle necked by the 1Gbps connection from the switch to the CPU. It doesn't matter how beefy the CPU is in that hardware configuration.
...
The CPU still can't saturate the GigE interfaces it has...
I've searched everywhere, among the MUM presentations and elsewhere, about the actual inner wiring of the RB1100AHx2 but I've been very unsuccessful...If you search the forums and MUM presentations you will find this about RB1100AHx2
one that i remember is this:I've searched everywhere, among the MUM presentations and elsewhere, about the actual inner wiring of the RB1100AHx2 but I've been very unsuccessful...If you search the forums and MUM presentations you will find this about RB1100AHx2
Can you please point me to a documentation/presentation that explains how the "port group" work on this board?
Thanks!