David Kwan wrote:
I have a few questions regarding the TCP:

I have a situation with clients on a 100MB network connecting to servers
on a Gigabit network where the client read speeds are very slow from the
FreeBSD server and fast from the Linux server.    Write speeds from the
clients to both servers are fast.  (Clients on the gigabit network work
fine with blazing read and write speeds).  The network traces shows
congestion packets for both servers when doing reads from the clients
(dup acks and retransmissions), but the Linux server seem to handle the
congestion better.   ECN is not enabled on the network and I don't see
any congestion windowing or clients window changing.  The 100/1G switch
is dropping packets.   I double checked the network configuration and
also swapped swithports for the servers to use the others to make sure
the switch configuration are the same and the Linux always does better
than FreeBSD.  Assuming that the network configuration is a constant for
all clients and servers (speed, duplex, and etc...), the only variable
is the servers  themselves (Linux and FreeBSD).  I have tried a couple
of FreeBSD machines with 6.1 and 7.0 and they show the same problem,
with no luck matching the speed and network utilization of Linux (2
years old).  The read speed test I'm referring is doing transferring of
a 100MB file (cifs, nfs, and ftp), and the Linux server does it
constantly in around 10 sec (line speed) with a constant network
utilization chart, while the FreeBSD servers are magnitudes slower with
erratic network utilization chart.  I've attempted to tweak some network
sysctl  options on the FreeBSD, and the only ones that helped were
disabling TSO and inflight; which leads me to think that the
inter-packet gap was slightly increased to partially relieve congestion
on the switch; not a long term solution.

My questions are:
  1.  Have you heard of this problem before with 100MB clients to
Gigabit servers?

The key point seems to be that the switch is dropping packets. If you have packet loss then TCP is not going to perform well.

Kris
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