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by drbawb
794 days ago
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I was able to get up to 35-37 Gbps between my host-guest with a virtio NIC with the outdated iperf3.exe, which I did indeed acquire from the site mentioned in the article. That seems like plenty of perf, to me, considering the fattest link I could possibly have in my house would be ~35Gbps if I aggregated all the ports on my switch. (... and filled my Threadripper system with nothing but NICs, I guess?) I actually get ~7 Gbps, not 10Gbps, out to my real network. I haven't dug into what the issue is but when hitting my real network the guest clearly becomes bottlenecked by CPU, so I doubt iperf3 is to blame. (The host does not have this problem despite being on the same bridge, so I'm guessing there is some host-guest optimization I'm hitting in the virtio driver in the former case.) Now that's a low-latency, high-bandwidth link. If you're testing "high latency, high-bandwidth" as purported in the article, and that link is apparently ~40Gbps or fatter, you're probably running on a "real server" in a "real datacenter" somewhere. I can tell you I wouldn't be burning a Windows Server license just to verify my L2/L3 connectivity is configured correctly. I am sure MS would love if I bought two licenses of their proprietary operating system just to use this proprietary network testing client, but my pockets are not infinitely deep. (As I already spent all that money on the Cisco-branded optics. /s) |
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