In SystemRescue, setting the user password will allow remote shell access via SSH. (Based on your earlier posts on this thread, I’m assuming that you know enough about Linux for me to skip some details. Select the option to buffer the image into RAM so that you can unplug the USB drive (if that’s what you’re using). Boot your UNRAID box from the SystemRescue live CD/USB. Head over to and make a bootable CD or USB flash drive. In situations like this, it’s best to test with a barebones setup. The CrystalDiskMark and ping tests were clearly from a Windows machine, but were the Backblaze speed tests also from the same machine or were they from the UNRAID box? (If the tests results were all from a different computer, it’s fine for diagnosing your broadband connection, but unfortunately leaves a lot of unknowns with your UNRAID box.) While it’s quite a difference compared to the Backblaze test results, it’s the jitter that looks odd because it went from bad to good while a backup was running (in general, 30ms or less is ideal for VoIP, video conferencing and other near real-time applications). The Waveform bufferbloat test you ran clocked your download speed at 839.8 Mbps and upload at 24.4 Mbps. Recapping the results from your Backblaze “Check Your Home Bandwidth” speed tests: Backupĝown Up Ping Jitter Could you post the shell output from “lspci” and “ip a s”? If I’m reading the screen grab correctly, there’s only one Ethernet cable plugged in. However, your UNRAID box is listing both NICs as capable of 1000 Mbps so it’s not clear which NIC is currently mapped to “eth0”. Based on the screen grab you posted of the UNRAID system info, the ASUS mainboard in your UNRAID box has dual embedded NICs – an Intel I211-AT (1 Gbps) and an Aquantia AQC-107 (10 Gbps).
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