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Date:      Fri, 24 Mar 2006 14:12:01 +0100
From:      "OxY" <oxy@field.hu>
To:        "Jin Guojun [VFFS]" <g_jin@lbl.gov>, "Arne Woerner" <arne_woerner@yahoo.com>
Cc:        freebsd-performance@freebsd.org, Gary Thorpe <gthorpe@myrealbox.com>
Subject:   Re: packet drop with intel gigabit / marwell gigabit
Message-ID:  <003301c64f44$89fdcd40$0201a8c0@oxy>
References:  <20060322071023.70808.qmail@web30305.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <442187FE.3060300@lbl.gov>

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hi guys!

well, i changed my motherboard and CPU  from the
asus a7v8x+amd 2000+ xp to=20
the abit be7 + p4 2.4 (533fsb)  and the packet loss fell down from 8% to =
2%, but
still have loss...
loss coming when i have load.. i guess it decreased because of the =
bigger resources.
still waiting for tipps, hints, everything :)

  ----- Original Message -----=20
  From: Jin Guojun [VFFS]=20
  To: Arne Woerner=20
  Cc: Gary Thorpe ; freebsd-performance@freebsd.org ; oxy@field.hu=20
  Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 6:23 PM
  Subject: Re: packet drop with intel gigabit / marwell gigabit


  Arne Woerner wrote:=20
--- "Jin Guojun [VFFS]" <g_jin@lbl.gov> wrote:
In you example:
  Now your 1.6 GB/s reduced to 16MB/s or even worse just based
on this factor.

    What did we show by this <<dd if=3D/dev/zero ...>> test? I thought
that would prove the memory bandwidth is about 8Gbit/sec
(1GByte/sec; 2 * <dd's bytes/sec number>/2^30).
  It depends on how you use /dev/zero.=20

  dd of=3D/dev/null if=3D/dev/zero bs=3D4k count=3D100k
  tests cache speed

  dd of=3D/dev/null if=3D/dev/zero bs=3D4m count=3D100
  tests memory bandwidth if your cache is less than 2 MB

  Now you may give me the real memory bandwidth on your system :-)
  I would expect something around 500.
  Notice that your memory copy speed  will  be one half of it.=20

  /dev/null device really does nothing beside throwing away data.
  That is, it can be counted as a cost for system call.

      -Jin



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