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Date:      Thu, 11 Jul 2002 16:25:40 -0700
From:      David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
To:        Thierry Herbelot <thierry@herbelot.com>
Cc:        Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>, freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: tuning(7) request was: Re: Performance boost with kernel options in FBSD 4.6
Message-ID:  <20020711232540.GA1437@HAL9000.wox.org>
In-Reply-To: <3D2DF09C.B553DE07@herbelot.com>
References:  <20020710104730.L10343-100000@klima.physik.uni-mainz.de> <04a601c228dc$c6dbb980$681663cf@icarz.com> <200207111930.g6BJUX5m096974@apollo.backplane.com> <3D2DF09C.B553DE07@herbelot.com>

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Thus spake Thierry Herbelot <thierry@herbelot.com>:
> Matthew Dillon wrote:
> > 
> >     An increased switching rate (increasing HZ) may be useful in the above
> >     situation.  Still, I would not recommend increasing Hz above 500 (2ms).
> >     10000 (100uS) is just plain insane.
> > 
> 
> from actual experience, any p-III with a clock rate above 500MHz (that
> is, any recent CPU) can sustain Hz=5000, which I used to run
> trafific-shaped packet blasters (admittedly a narrow focus ...) with
> very good results (better than special-purpose test boxes).
> 
> As is said in the dummynet man page, FreeBSD can be a very good traffic
> shaper, if the userland scheduling rate is high enough (will it be the
> same with threads in -current, with KSE ?).

Sure modern processors can handle 5000 Hz at the expense of a few
CPU cycles, but do you actually find that dummynet isn't accurate
enough at 1000 Hz?

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