| To: | satya srikanth <satyasrikanth2001@xxxxxxxxx> |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: Xeon smp performance |
| From: | P@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
| Date: | Mon, 08 Mar 2004 15:15:30 +0000 |
| Cc: | netdev@xxxxxxxxxxx |
| In-reply-to: | <20040308132354.77437.qmail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| References: | <20040308132354.77437.qmail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Sender: | netdev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx |
| User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.6) Gecko/20040124 |
satya srikanth wrote: Hi, I am writing a simple sniffer program that will sniff packets in a gigabit network. I am using a dual processor 2 GHz Xeon processor with one Intel Pro-1000desktop adapter, running 2.4.20-8smp linux. I found that for all packet sizes and networkbandwidth, 2.4.20-8 uniprocessor version that uses only one processor is performing better than 2.4.20-8smp using two processors in terms of packet drops and CPU utilization. Each processor in smp is utilizing more CPU than one processor in uni-processor case. What is the reason for this peculiar behaviour? Is it possible for me to use the power of second processor without adding more NICs. Will I face similar problems with 2.6 also? Anybody familiar with these please help me out. That matches my experience. My chipset was Intel E7501 with 2 intel pro-1000 adapters. I used the base 2.4.20 kernel with latest intel drivers. I had 2 processes capturing packets and noticed that 2 CPUs is 7% slower than one CPU. Note I was using a non SMP kernel for the one CPU case. I'm going to have to look into improving this soon. First I'm going to look at IRQ and process affinity. Pádraig. |
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