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Date:      Wed, 31 May 2006 17:23:04 +1000
From:      Peter Jeremy <peterjeremy@optushome.com.au>
To:        Robert Watson <rwatson@freebsd.org>
Cc:        "current@freebsd.org" <current@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Importing iSCSI target from NetBSD
Message-ID:  <20060531072303.GB720@turion.vk2pj.dyndns.org>
In-Reply-To: <20060530094413.W79162@fledge.watson.org>
References:  <447AB34C.4030509@sippysoft.com> <11410450515.20060529225555@lacave.net> <447B77AF.9060309@samsco.org> <447B7A55.7040704@FreeBSD.org> <447B7CB7.5000000@FreeBSD.org> <447B8900.4050603@samsco.org> <20060530004328.GF28128@groat.ugcs.caltech.edu> <20060530015234.GB26022@odin.ac.hmc.edu> <20060530094413.W79162@fledge.watson.org>

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On Tue, 2006-May-30 09:46:39 +0100, Robert Watson wrote:
>network bandwidth.  It seems like hardware swings back and forth quite a 
>bit -- for a few years gigabit was way-the-heck-faster-than-CPU, now it's 
>the other way around again.  The best stack optimization work happens when 
>you have to figure out how to get the network stack to perform well in 
>near-infinite bandwidth scenarios with a CPU-bound stack,

Can't you get this by using a gigabit interface and throttling the
CPU via ACPI or cpufreq?

-- 
Peter Jeremy



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