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Message-ID: <4F55CA25.2070503@redhat.com>
Date: Tue, 06 Mar 2012 16:26:13 +0800
From: Jason Wang <jasowang@...hat.com>
To: Feng Tang <feng.tang@...el.com>
CC: David Miller <davem@...emloft.net>, alex.shi@...el.com,
eric.dumazet@...il.com, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
tim.c.chen@...el.com, ying.huang@...el.com, netdev@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: TCP_STREAM performance regression on commit b3613118
On 03/06/2012 04:11 PM, Feng Tang wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 01, 2012 at 10:07:43PM -0500, David Miller wrote:
>> > From: Alex Shi<alex.shi@...el.com>
>> > Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2012 10:45:17 +0800
>> >
>>> > > Add CC to tang feng, He is working on this issue.
>> >
>> > Is he? I'm pretty sure this is due to the TCP receive window growing
>> > issue Eric Dumazet, Neal Cardwell and I are discussing in the thread
>> > starting at:
>> >
>> > http://marc.info/?l=linux-netdev&m=132916352815286&w=2
> Yes, probably, as we did find some clue related with the tcp_r/wmem.
>
> Here is the regression we found:
> On some machines, we found there is about 10% resgression of netperf
> TCP-64K loopback test between 3.2 and 3.3-rc1. The exact test is:
> ./netperf -t TCP_STREAM -l 60 -H 127.0.0.1 -i 50,3 -I 99,5 -- -s 32768 -S 32768 -m 4096
>
>
> The test machine is a 2 socket Quad Core Core 2 Duo server(2.66GHz) with
> 8 GB RAM. Following are the debug info (ifconfig/netstat -s/tcp_rwmem)
> before and after the test:
>
> The most obvious differences I can see are:
> 1) 311 GB vs 241 GB from ifconfig
> 2) the difference of the tcp_r/wmem
Hi:
Could you try the newest kernel? Looks like the difference has been
already fixed by commit c43b874d5d714f271b80d4c3f49e05d0cbf51ed2.
Thanks
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