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Message-ID: <20090504211151.74622f29@python3.es.egwn.lan>
Date: Mon, 4 May 2009 21:11:51 +0200
From: Matthias Saou
<thias@...m.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.egg.and.spam.freshrpms.net>
To: Eric Dumazet <dada1@...mosbay.com>
Cc: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
Linux Netdev List <netdev@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Wrong network usage reported by /proc
Eric Dumazet wrote :
> Matthias Saou a écrit :
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm posting here as a last resort. I've got lots of heavily used RHEL5
> > servers (2.6.18 based) that are reporting all sorts of impossible
> > network usage values through /proc, leading to unrealistic snmp/cacti
> > graphs where the outgoing bandwidth used it higher than the physical
> > interface's maximum speed.
> >
> > For some details and a test script which compares values from /proc
> > with values from tcpdump :
> > https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=489541
> >
> > The values collected using tcpdump always seem realistic and match the
> > values seen on the remote network equipments. So my obvious conclusion
> > (but possibly wrong given my limited knowledge) is that something is
> > wrong in the kernel, since it's the one exposing the /proc interface.
> >
> > I've reproduced what seems to be the same problem on recent kernels,
> > including the 2.6.27.21-170.2.56.fc10.x86_64 I'm running right now. The
> > simple python script available here allows to see it quite easily :
> > https://www.redhat.com/archives/rhelv5-list/2009-February/msg00166.html
> >
> > * I run the script on my Workstation, I have an FTP server enabled
> > * I download a DVD ISO from a remote workstation : The values match
> > * I start ping floods from remote workstations : The values reported
> > by /proc are much higher than the ones reported by tcpdump. I used
> > "ping -s 500 -f myworkstation" from two remote workstations
> >
> > If there's anything flawed in my debugging, I'd love to have someone
> > point it out to me. TIA to anyone willing to have a look.
> >
> > Matthias
> >
>
> I could not reproduce this here... what kind of NIC are you using on
> affected systems ? Some ethernet drivers report stats from card itself,
> and I remember seeing some strange stats on some hardware, but I cannot
> remember which one it was (we were reading NULL values instead of
> real ones, once in a while, maybe it was a firmware issue...)
My workstation has a Broadcom BCM5752 (tg3 module). The servers which
are most affected have Intel 82571EB (e1000e). But the issue is that
with /proc, the values are a lot _higher_ than with tcpdump, and the
tcpdump values seem to be the correct ones.
Matthias
--
Clean custom Red Hat Linux rpm packages : http://freshrpms.net/
Fedora release 10 (Cambridge) - Linux kernel
2.6.27.21-170.2.56.fc10.x86_64 Load : 2.20 0.88 0.42
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