[Bloat] [Codel] Network test tools for many parallel/concurrent connections?
Jesper Dangaard Brouer
jbrouer at redhat.com
Wed May 15 06:27:28 EDT 2013
Hi Rick,
Thanks for your input :-)
I will definitely look into all these advanced options that netperf
provide (which is didn't know of). Netperf is definitely my favorite
benchmarking tool, but I don't think it supports concurrent connections?
(Perhaps a stupid question:) I'm curr using netperf 2.x, any reason I
should switch to netperf 3.x ?
Thanks you for developing netperf,
--Jesper
On Tue, 14 May 2013 15:26:22 -0700
Rick Jones <rick.jones2 at hp.com> wrote:
> It will not match what one can get from tcptrace, or commercial
> solutions, but netperf can be asked to emit a number of potentially
> "intersting" things. Using the "omni output selectors" one can
> request statistics for some interesting latencies:
>
> raj at tardy:~$ netperf -- -O ? | grep LAT
> RT_LATENCY
> MIN_LATENCY
> MAX_LATENCY
> P50_LATENCY
> P90_LATENCY
> P99_LATENCY
> MEAN_LATENCY
> STDDEV_LATENCY
>
> For a STREAM test those will be based on time in the send call. For
> a MAERTS test those will be time in the receive call. For an RR test
> those will be the round-trip times at the application layer.
>
> You can also ./configure --enable-histogram and if the verbosity is
> set to 2 or more, a histogram of the distribution will be emitted
> which will resemble:
>
> Histogram of time spent in send() call.
> UNIT_USEC : 0: 0: 434: 404912: 715323: 800663: 263305:
> 9336: 2439: 1522
> TEN_USEC : 0: 2276: 41: 48: 97: 67: 79: 17:
> 5: 7 HUNDRED_USEC : 0: 28: 2: 2: 0: 2: 0:
> 0: 1: 1 UNIT_MSEC : 0: 3: 2: 0: 1: 0:
> 1: 0: 0: 0 TEN_MSEC : 0: 0: 0: 0: 0:
> 0: 0: 0: 0: 0 HUNDRED_MSEC : 0: 0: 0: 0:
> 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0 UNIT_SEC : 0: 0: 0:
> 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0 TEN_SEC : 0: 0:
> 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0
> >100_SECS: 0
> HIST_TOTAL: 2200614
>
> when running under Linux, netperf also knows how to report the number
> of TCP retransmissions encountered over the life of the data
> connection:
>
> raj at tardy:~$ netperf -- -O ? | grep -i retran
> LOCAL_TRANSPORT_RETRANS
> REMOTE_TRANSPORT_RETRANS
>
> And if you want to have an idea of what each individual netperf was
> doing in terms of mbit/s or trans/s over discrete points in its
> lifetime, you can ./configure --enable-demo and it will emit interim
> results at roughly the requested interval which can then be
> post-processed. An example of that being done can be found in
> doc/examples/runemomniaggdemo.sh script and doc/examples/post_proc.py
>
> happy benchmarking,
>
> rick jones
--
Best regards,
Jesper Dangaard Brouer
MSc.CS, Sr. Network Kernel Developer at Red Hat
Author of http://www.iptv-analyzer.org
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/brouer
More information about the Bloat
mailing list