![]() Using rclone mount, I was able to get full 120 MB/s both up and down, and the mount has otherwise worked great so far as well. Using the option -o Ciphers=aes128-ctr increased that to about 50MB/s down (arcfour is no longer supported on open SSH, so didn't work). Speeds below will be in MB/s, so wire speed would be about 125 MB/s (1 Gb/S).įor me, default settings of sshfs gave me ~30 MB/s down from the server and full 120 MB/s up. ![]() Setup: M1 Mac connected over gigabit ethernet to a server running Rocky 8, with a big high speed raid filesystem. This enabled me to get full gigabit speed both up and down.Ī little more about my experience and testing: Short Version: Try using rclone mount instead of sshfs. I've been doing testing with various tools on MacOS 12.1 on an M1 mac and wanted to share some possibly helpful results. But when it's done, accessing the files should feel nice and fast. Obviously this will take much longer, will transfer a lot of data, and requires you to have a huge cache size. If you also want to pre-cache file contents, you could try this: tar c project/folder/on/mounted/fs > /dev/null
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