Date: Mon, 05 Oct 2009 15:52:39 +0500 From: rihad <rihad@mail.ru> To: Eugene Grosbein <eugen@kuzbass.ru> Cc: freebsd-net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: dummynet dropping too many packets Message-ID: <4AC9CFF7.3090208@mail.ru> In-Reply-To: <20091005095600.GA73335@svzserv.kemerovo.su> References: <4AC8A76B.3050502@mail.ru> <20091005025521.GA52702@svzserv.kemerovo.su> <20091005061025.GB55845@onelab2.iet.unipi.it> <4AC9B400.9020400@mail.ru> <20091005090102.GA70430@svzserv.kemerovo.su> <4AC9BC5A.50902@mail.ru> <20091005095600.GA73335@svzserv.kemerovo.su>
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Eugene Grosbein wrote: > On Mon, Oct 05, 2009 at 02:28:58PM +0500, rihad wrote: > >> Still not sure why increasing queue size as high as I want doesn't >> completely eliminate drops. > > The goal is to make sources of traffic to slow down, this is the only > way to descrease drops - any finite queue may be overhelmed with traffic. > Taildrop does not really help with this. GRED does much better. > Alright, so I changed to gred by adding to each config command: ipfw ... gred 0.002/900/1000/0.1 queue 1000 and reconfigured. Still around 300-400 drops per second, which was typical at this load level before with taildrop anyway. There are around 3-5 mbit/s being wasted according to systat -ifstat. Should I now increase slots to 5-10-20k? Very strange. "ipfw pipe show" correctly shows that gred is at work. For example: 00512: 512.000 Kbit/s 0 ms 1000 sl. 79 queues (64 buckets) GRED w_q 0.001999 min_th 900 max_th 1000 max_p 0.099991 mask: 0x00 0x00000000/0x0000 -> 0xffffffff/0x0000 ...
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