Why is Mac Studio's 10G network speed limited to 1G during video file transfers?

I have a 10G network and a Mac Studio. When I'm transferring video files to my NAS (also 10G and sharing the same 10G switch), the Mac Studio is limited to 1gbps transfer (see below report during a transfer). The network sees the connection as 10G, the Mac sees the connection as 10G, the cable itself can transfer at 10G on Windows or server to server using the same Cat 6A. It's just the Mac won't. Is this 1G limitation simply because the SSD's are just of very poor quality or is something else going on with the device?



[Re-Titled by Moderator]

Mac Studio, macOS 15.3

Posted on May 13, 2025 11:46 AM

Reply

Similar questions

7 replies

May 13, 2025 3:35 PM in response to TheMalone

The setting [√] ABV/AEV mode selected on the hardware pane of advanced Wi-Fi Ethernet OR in your Router may constrain the connection in unexpected ways that could limit overall performance. The feature is used ONLY for prioritizing “live” camera video streams over Ethernet


Actual Speed:

The good way to check the actual connection speed USED to be Network Utility, But in Catalina and later, Apple has deprecated Network Utility and now you have to use a Terminal command to see your actual connection speed. First, you need to know what en number the link is. then you use a command like this one, substituting the actual en number.


my main Ethernet connection uses BSD name en2 (as shown in) :

 menu > about this Mac > (system report) > network:


Aquantia AQC107-B0:


Name: ethernet

Type: Ethernet Controller

Bus: PCI

Slot: Slot-3

Vendor ID: 0x1d6a

Device ID: 0x87b1

Subsystem Vendor ID: 0x1d6a

Subsystem ID: 0x0001

Revision ID: 0x0002

Link Width: x4

BSD name: en2

Kext name: AppleEthernetAquantiaAqtion.kext

Location: /System/Library/Extensions/IONetworkingFamily.kext/Contents/PlugIns/AppleEthernetAquantiaAqtion.kext

Version: 1.0.64


Terminal command:


ifconfig en2 | grep media


with this as my output for 10 Gigabit Ethernet:


media: 10Gbase-T <full-duplex,flow-control>

For ‘regular’ Gigabit Ethernet, you should get this instead:


media: 1000baseT <full-duplex,flow-control>


Errors detected:

To see if an Ethernet link is throwing more than a handful of initial errors, you can use Terminal command:


netstat -I en2


This is the resulting output. Counters are In-packets, In-errors, Out-packets, Out-Errors, Collisions. There should never be more than handful of errors from starting up, and in most cases, NONE.


Name       Mtu   Network       Address            Ipkts Ierrs    Opkts Oerrs  Coll

en2   8163  <Link#4>    00:01:d2:1a:00:dd   696697     0   484301     0     0

en2   8163  grantsmacpr fe80:4::461:ea0d:   696697     -   484301     -     -

en2   8163  192.168.0/23  192.168.0.204     696697     -   484301     -     -


Reading the top line, If the link were running beyond its ability to run and be stable, for example it auto-speeded to 10Gb but the cabling could only reliably support 2.5Gb, we would see non-zero errors counts, and errors increasing over time. (and possibly, disconnecting)

May 15, 2025 10:49 AM in response to TheMalone

<< The cable, port, and transceiver has been tested and proven to support 10G. >>


That certainly cuts down on some issues.

The default setting on the Mac for 10G Ethernet is auto-speed. if you have yours set to auto-speed, what speed did it ACTUALLY connect at?


the procedure I provided uses a few commands was to determine EXACTLY at what speed it connected.

The other alternative is to use Advanced Hardware Settings and deliberately specify 10G Internet. if it can nit attain that speed for some reason, you get no connection instead, and can then chase down WHY.

May 14, 2025 12:53 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

That's not the issue. The port is capable of 10G as tested through Windows and Linux, also confirmed the speed by timing transfers of known file sizes. The cable, port, and transceiver has been tested and proven to support 10G. Also, there is no such thing as "WiFi ethernet", so I'm not sure what you mean by that. There is nothing throttling the speed, other than what's happening in the Mac.

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Why is Mac Studio's 10G network speed limited to 1G during video file transfers?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.