(There are some peculiarities with Linux and Filezilla, but that's probably not relevant to the OP. I don't do Windows so my knowledge there is limited.)Īs for settings, aside from configuring the client to use parallel and multi-part transfers, there's not much you can do with settings that will impact performance. The simple thing to do is copy the files from 1>2 from 1 or 2 and leave out the 3rd pc.without knowing any details about any of your 3 machines it's going to be hard to help you, and it's saturday morning, no one wants hard rn. Filezilla does not have this capability, but CuteFTP and Bitkinex (and lftp on Linux) do. The screenshots you've posted have nothing to do with OMV, so you're not likely to get much here. This latter capability might help a lot with that single 4k movie. Some clients can do multiple files in parallel and also break individual files into pieces that are transferred in parallel. If you're trying to download a single 4k movie file, that multiple file capability isn't going to help you. Filezilla can transfer multiple files in parallel, allowing you better speed in some congested situations, but only when you have multiple files to transfer. ![]() That said, in some situations the capabilities brought to the table by some FTP clients will allow them to perform better in certain situations than will other clients. The fact that somebody elsewhere in the world can get their Ferrari up to 180 MPH isn't relevant when you're stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on the 405. FTP/SFTP speeds will, in general, depend almost entirely on the path between source and destination and the amount of overall traffic along that path. The fact that one person gets great speeds with ProgramX does not mean everyone will get great speeds with ProgramX.
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