Link Aggregation Doubles 2-Port Bandwidth, Not Single-Stream Speed
Updated
Updated · MUO - MakeUseOf · Jun 13
Link Aggregation Doubles 2-Port Bandwidth, Not Single-Stream Speed
1 articles · Updated · MUO - MakeUseOf · Jun 13
Summary
Two aggregated Ethernet links raise total network capacity and add fail-safe redundancy, but a single file transfer still runs at the speed of one line.
Packet-ordering requirements keep one data stream on one connection, so aggregation spreads separate tasks across links instead of combining both for one download.
Busy homes and enterprises benefit when routers balance 4K streaming, game updates and other simultaneous traffic across the links, reducing congestion and latency spikes.
If one of the two links fails, traffic shifts instantly to the remaining connection without the detection and switchover delay typical of standby failover setups.
That makes link aggregation most valuable for crowded or mission-critical networks, while offering little benefit to users simply trying to speed up one download.