What does your policer config look like?  I've seen some links have problems
with large packet sizes if the burst was set too low.  Also, I think the
iperf packet loss calculation also counts some kind of internal buffering
"loss".  I'm couldn't find it on google but I remember reading something a
few years ago on another group.  Try increasing your you're buffer space on
iperf both server server and client side.  Also, make sure you have 1M or
more of burst since you are sending 1470B packets.

On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 5:41 AM, Martin T <m4rtn...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I made a following setup:
>
> http://img690.imageshack.us/img690/3162/iperftest.png
>
> In a laptop, an Iperf server is listening like this: "iperf -s -u -fm".
> In a workstation, an Iperf client is executed like this: "iperf -c
> 192.168.2.1 -u -fm -t60 -d -b 10m". This will execute simultaneous
> 10Mbps UDP traffic flood between 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.2.1 for 1
> minute. Results are always like this:
>
> [root@ ~]# iperf -c 192.168.2.1 -u -fm -t60 -d -b 10m
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Server listening on UDP port 5001
> Receiving 1470 byte datagrams
> UDP buffer size: 0.04 MByte (default)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Client connecting to 192.168.2.1, UDP port 5001
> Sending 1470 byte datagrams
> UDP buffer size: 0.01 MByte (default)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> [  4] local 192.168.1.1 port 32284 connected with 192.168.2.1 port 5001
> [  3] local 192.168.1.1 port 5001 connected with 192.168.2.1 port 52428
> [ ID] Interval       Transfer     Bandwidth
> [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec  71.5 MBytes  10.0 Mbits/sec
> [  4] Sent 51021 datagrams
> [  4] Server Report:
> [  4]  0.0-59.9 sec  69.8 MBytes  9.77 Mbits/sec   0.112 ms 1259/51020
> (2.5%)
> [  4]  0.0-59.9 sec  1 datagrams received out-of-order
> [  3]  0.0-60.0 sec  69.8 MBytes  9.77 Mbits/sec   0.030 ms 1200/51021
> (2.4%)
> [  3]  0.0-60.0 sec  1 datagrams received out-of-order
> [root@ ~]#
>
> As you can see, there is a ~2.5% packet loss. This packet loss is due
> to the fact, that router "bw-10Mbps" policer drops small percentage of
> packages in "input" direction(I can check the amount of dropped
> packets with "show policer" command). For example if I increase the
> policer "bandwidth-limit" to "11m", there will be no packet loss.
>
> In both machines(192.168.1.1 and 192.168.2.1) Iperf sends packets with
> 1470 byte payload. In addition, there is a 8 byte UDP header and 20
> byte IPv4 header. So according to tcpdump the whole IPv4 packet is
> 1498 bytes:
>
>
> [root@ ~]# tcpdump -i fxp0 -c 4 -v
> tcpdump: listening on fxp0, link-type EN10MB (Ethernet), capture size 96
> bytes
> 11:49:18.961405 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 63, id 44836, offset 0, flags [DF],
> proto UDP (17), length 1498)
>    192.168.2.1.52428 > 192.168.1.1.commplex-link: UDP, length 1470
> 11:49:18.961459 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 37052, offset 0, flags [none],
> proto UDP (17), length 1498)
>    192.168.1.1.32284 > 192.168.2.1.commplex-link: UDP, length 1470
> 11:49:18.961473 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 37053, offset 0, flags [none],
> proto UDP (17), length 1498)
>    192.168.1.1.32284 > 192.168.2.1.commplex-link: UDP, length 1470
> 11:49:18.961485 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 37054, offset 0, flags [none],
> proto UDP (17), length 1498)
>    192.168.1.1.32284 > 192.168.2.1.commplex-link: UDP, length 1470
> 4 packets captured
> 284 packets received by filter
> 0 packets dropped by kernel
> [root@ ~]#
>
> Whole frame size is 1512 bytes.
>
> Does JUNOS include UDP(or L3 header in general) header to this
> "bandwidth-limit 10m"? If it does, shouldn't there be 0.5% packet loss
> instead of 2.5%? Or if "bandwidth-limit 10m" includes IPv4 header as
> well, the packet loss for Iperf should be
>
> 1498 - 100%
>  28 - x%
>
> ..1.9% not ~2.5%. Are my calculations wrong or how does JUNOS policer
> "bandwidth-limit" calculate this 10m bits?
>
>
> regards,
> martin
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>
>
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