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TCP Performance
- Subject: TCP Performance
- From: nick at flhsi.com (Nick Olsen)
- Date: Tue, 27 Aug 2013 14:22:15 -0400
I have indeed tried that. And it didn't make any difference. Functionally
limiting each router port to is connected microwave links capacity. And
queuing the overflow. However the queue never really fills as the traffic
rate never goes higher then the allocated bandwidth.
Nick Olsen
Network Operations (855) FLSPEED x106
----------------------------------------
From: "Blake Dunlap" <ikiris at gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2013 1:32 PM
To: nick at flhsi.com
Cc: "Tim Warnock" <timoid at timoid.org>, "nanog at nanog.org" <nanog at nanog.org>
Subject: Re: TCP Performance
If you have a router, you can turn on shaping to the bandwidth the link
will support.
-Blake
On Tue, Aug 27, 2013 at 12:11 PM, Nick Olsen <nick at flhsi.com> wrote:
I do indeed have stats for "TX Pause Frames" And they do increment.
However, Our router is ignoring them since it doesn't support flow control.
I guess my next question would be. In the scenario where we insert a switch
between the radio and the router that does support flow control. Are we not
only moving where the overflow is going to occur? Will we not see the
router still burst traffic at line rate toward the switch, Which then
buffer overflows sending to the radio on account of it receiving pause
frames?
Nick Olsen
Network Operations (855) FLSPEED x106
----------------------------------------
From: "Tim Warnock" <timoid at timoid.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2013 1:08 PM
To: "Blake Dunlap" <ikiris at gmail.com>, "nick at flhsi.com" <nick at flhsi.com>
Cc: "nanog at nanog.org" <nanog at nanog.org>
Subject: RE: TCP Performance
> Regardless, your problem looks like either tail drops or packet loss,
which
> you showed originally. The task is to find out where this is occurring,
and
> which of the two it is. If you want to confirm what is going on, there
are
> some great bandwidth calculators on the internet which will show you
what
> bandwidth you can get with a given ms delay and % packet loss.
>
> As far as flow control, its really outside the scope. If you ever need
flow
> control, there is usually a specific reason like FCoE, and if not, it's
> generally better to just fix the backplane congestion issue if you can,
> than ever worry about using FC. The problem with FC isn't node to node,
its
> when you have node to node to node with additional devices, it isn't
smart
> enough to discriminate, and can crater your network 3 devices over when
it
> would be much better to just lose a few packets.
>
> -Blake
In my experience - if you're traversing licenced microwave links as
indicated flow control will definitely need to be ON.
Check the radio modem stats to confirm but - if you're seeing lots of drops
there you're overflowing the buffers on the radio modem.