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Date:      Thu, 19 Oct 1995 16:03:35 -0400
From:      dennis@etinc.com (dennis)
To:        Joe Greco <jgreco@brasil.moneng.mei.com>
Cc:        hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Bragging rights..
Message-ID:  <199510192003.QAA28405@etinc.com>

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>> >Now if you can find yourself a TA that can do 230.4 or 460.8, and the
>> >ET/5025 is able to do that in async, that might be a benefit.  I've
>> >retrofitted 16550 ports to run at such speeds and the CPU does eventually
>> >reach a point where it has difficulty keeping up on a consistent basis
>> >(although this is more likely a driver issue...?)
>> 
>> 115k minus 20% async overhead.....Mostly I've heard about 70k or so for
>> async links....If you don't think that 20-30% is worth an extra hundred
>> dollars, then I guess you're entitled to that. It is, however, a
consideration.
>
>Really??!!
>

>I had a 386DX/40 that routinely chatted with a 386DX/16 at 115200 (UUCP over
>TCP/IP as a SLIP connection) and consistently hit > 10.5K/sec -- the number
>ran around 11K/sec during non-peak times here at MEI, and I attribute the
>difference to our network rather than any of the FreeBSD boxes involved (our
>network traffic peaks at wire saturation at times, and never falls below
>10%).

90K still isn't 128k though??!!!!! So what does this have to do with ISDN,
anyway? You realize, of course, that you're going through a Telephone switch
digitally with ISDN.....


>The 386/40 was also running the uucico for one side...
>
>These two systems had jacked-up serial ports.  When I ran them at 230.4K, I
>started to hit serial overruns, but with TCP/IP retries they still were
>capable of hitting 19K/sec (which amazes me!!!)  However at 19K/sec the
>386DX/16 was definitely swamped, and the 386DX/40 was having troubles too
>(it was also maintaining the uucico, several uncompress/gzip's concurrently,
>another uucico running over ANOTHER SLIP link over a V.FC modem connection
>to sol.net).

And with a sync card your 386-16 wouldn't have overloaded......

>For those who are wondering what the hell I was doing  :-)  I was receiving
>a full news feed.  Because I could not directly connect to the local network
>(firewall restrictions), I came in through a carefully gated, hardwired SLIP
>connection into the terminal server, and ran UUCP to gather batches of news.
>That was the high speed link  :-)  I then turned around and tossed it into
>sol.net's WAN structure with an ordinary POTS/V.FC modem.  In the process,
>because the news was only compressed, I uncompressed it and used gzip -9 on
>it to achieve more virtual throughput  :-)

Yes....I think that this is a typical scenario...what does this have to do
with anything??????


.of course, we could do on-the-fly compression (without all of the fancy
crap) and do better as well.


db
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Emerging Technologies, Inc.      http://www.etinc.com

Synchronous Communications Cards and Routers For
Discriminating Tastes. 56k to T1 and beyond. Frame
Relay, PPP, HDLC, and X.25




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