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I also had such problem with FreeBSD-7 Stable-SMP with 4 port Intel
1GBit NIC em Driver and with Packet Filter, ALTQ enabled.

I tested with iperf from network a to network b. I found freebsd droping
packets and the transfer speed in routed mode is only 2 mbit/s compare
to linux router which able to forward the traffic at almost full speed.



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?
> 
>   2. Are you aware of any Linux fix/patch the TCP stack to better
> handling congestion than FreeBSD?  I'm looking to address this issue in
> the FreeBSD, but wondering if the Linux stack did something special that
> can help with the FreeBSD performance.
> 
>  
> 
> David K.
> 
>  
> 
> _______________________________________________
> freebsd-performance@freebsd.org mailing list
> http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-performance
> To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> 

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