On 3/31/2020 9:48 AM, Erkki Lintunen
wrote:
On 3/26/20 11:22 PM, Tim Higgins wrote:
Second question: Is there any
documentation that can help me figure out exactly what traffic
is running in each test type?
Not exactly an answer to the question.
I found following pages very helpful when three years ago I
challenged myself with Flent to measure WiFi network performance
and max it out with network devices I had at hand at the time.
(One ap blew up it's two capasitors. Visually and operationally
the ap was working as normal but measurements showed drastic drop
in performance. Light odor and inspection of el-capasitor burned
tops did confirm the hard to believe experience.)
<https://www.bufferbloat.net/projects/bloat/wiki/RRUL_Chart_Explanation/>
The above page provides link to this page.
<https://burntchrome.blogspot.com/2016/12/cake-latest-in-sqm-qos-schedulers.html>
Experience showed up Flent's feature to compare data sets very
educating and powerfull, not only with the box-plot chart as the
pages show. Took time to get mentaly bend to read and interpret
the Flent charts instead of only numbers I was used to with iperf
and other tools.
In my quest I did a change, measured it, compared to the previous
set and reviewed, if the change showed any measurable effect.
Finally I compared the sets of the very first and the last. I was
totally driven by measurements on my way myth busting many my
beliefs for a performant network.
The quest changed my definition for "getting max out of a
network". Now the max is all quantities in effect at any time:
fairness, lowest possible latency and highest possible bitrate.
Looking at many published benchmarks today, I still think, max
seams to mean just a maximum bitrate and other qualities are
_supposed_ to derive from it.
Hope this is for any help.
- Erkki
Thanks for the references and information, Erkki