After re-installing my desktop PC with FreeBSD, I noticed that my network is awfully slow, but only when X is running.
In the console, I get my usual speed of approx 1.2MiB/s (download). This is the speed it used to run at, both with FreeBSD 11 and 12 before I re-installed.
If I start X and, for example, clone FreeBSD's GitHub repository, I can't get past 30 KiB/s. To be more precise, I had normal speed for about 5 minutes, and then I was stuck at that speed.
If I exit X, I get my normal speed back. Starting X again, my network gets super slow again... and so on.
I don't have much installed, and to be sure, I re-installed again and used packages instead of ports (in case I was doing something wrong): xorg, nvidia-driver, nvidia-xconfig, nvidia-settings, windowmaker, emacs, git. nvidia-driver would not install (complaining about an unrecognised ELF format for Linux compatibility), so I installed the port and disabled Linux compatibility.
My network interface uses the em driver.
I must say I am a bit mystified by the whole thing... I must be missing something really obvious, but I can't see what... Any thoughts?
In the console, I get my usual speed of approx 1.2MiB/s (download). This is the speed it used to run at, both with FreeBSD 11 and 12 before I re-installed.
If I start X and, for example, clone FreeBSD's GitHub repository, I can't get past 30 KiB/s. To be more precise, I had normal speed for about 5 minutes, and then I was stuck at that speed.
If I exit X, I get my normal speed back. Starting X again, my network gets super slow again... and so on.
I don't have much installed, and to be sure, I re-installed again and used packages instead of ports (in case I was doing something wrong): xorg, nvidia-driver, nvidia-xconfig, nvidia-settings, windowmaker, emacs, git. nvidia-driver would not install (complaining about an unrecognised ELF format for Linux compatibility), so I installed the port and disabled Linux compatibility.
My network interface uses the em driver.
I must say I am a bit mystified by the whole thing... I must be missing something really obvious, but I can't see what... Any thoughts?