dimension wrote:
Jumbo frames will not necessarily avoid saturation of the nic.
Check my post - I didn't say it would - what I said was it would reduce the possibility.
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All it means is that you get to push more data per packet. The packet size however will be larger so you get to push less packets.
I see we're in perfect agreement - in fact that's the reason it's less likely to saturate the nic - you transmit more data, in less bits, because you reduce the overhead.
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In most practical applications of Naslite, jumbo frames are really a tossup. They will probably provide little or no noticeable improvement. That being especially true with common consumer grade routers most people have.
Again - we agree - your common consumer grade router is 100 mbps, jumbo frame is not a consideration.
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So, although you have a theoretical argument, in practice it matters little.
Just my opinion.

In fact, my arguement,
as intended, was just as ridiculous as Ralph's answer - however my point is - and it remains a valid one - Ralph's answer shows no good reason not to include jumbo frame support.
Browse the forum and you'll find that some of the folks have significant hardware investment in their NAS, do you really think these folks are running your "common consumer grade router"?
The people who're buying the product are the video aficiandos looking for storage for their collections, people willing to spend money to purchase RAID cards and high capacity hard drives, and with the price of a gigabit switch with jumbo support being less than that of a couple of 500GB disks, yes, I believe there is a need for jumbo frame support.
Make it a configureable option and you can eliminate Ralph's stated reasons for not supporting it.