Steve wrote:
> 
> On Wed, May 23, 2001 at 07:25:37PM -0400, Paul Davis wrote:
> > >> I'm just wondering, since I'm getting a .7 ms roundtrip time when
> > >> pinging my other Linux system here, which is connected to this one
> > >> by 100 Mbps ethernet through a 100 Mbps switch.  Is that number
> > >> for real?  Because it seems almost too good.
> > >
> > >I get 150-250usec (yes, microseconds) roundtrip through 100mbps switch.
> > 
> > is this on a previously quiescent connection (TCP or UDP) ? my
> > impression is that once things get rolling round trip times are pretty
> > good, but that moving a packet or two when there's been no traffic in
> > a few msecs produces much worse numbers. my impression may be wrong.
> 
> Over ethernet it seem to be only the first packet that is slow, probably
> depends on the make of switch though.

IIRC, there was a longer ping time for me even when I had two systems
connected with a crossover cable and no switch/hub.

> But as Paul said these times are too slow to be useful.

Well, to be useful for what?  For some purposes (such as audio playback
over the network) less than a millisecond of delay is super.

It would also be acceptable for a system that is running a software
synthesizer and sending an audio stream to a multitrack recorder on
another system.  It might be better than using an analog or optical
connection through a sound card(?).

For software that is mostly running on one system, and trying to use
a few plugins over a network connection, then it is not so good!

- Jay Ts
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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