Also as the OS's are shipped they come with small default maximum window sizes (I 
think Linux is typically 64KB and Solaris is 8K), and so one has to get the sysadmin 
with root privs to change this. 

-----Original Message-----
From: Iljitsch van Beijnum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2003 5:25 AM
To: Joe St Sauver
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: 923Mbits/s across the ocean



On Sat, 8 Mar 2003, Joe St Sauver wrote:

> you will see that for bulk TCP flows, the median throughput is still 
> only 2.3Mbps. 95th%-ile is only ~9Mbps. That's really not all that 
> great, throughput wise, IMHO.

Strange. Why is that? RFC 1323 is widely implemented, although not widely enabled (and 
for good reason: the timestamp option kills header compression so it's bad for 
lower-bandwidth connections). My guess is that the OS can't afford to throw around MB+ 
size buffers for every TCP session so the default buffers (which limit the windows 
that can be
used) are relatively small and application programmers don't override the default.

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