nanog mailing list archives
Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second
From: John Kristoff <jtk () depaul edu>
Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2016 11:39:41 -0600
On Tue, 29 Nov 2016 09:06:00 +0000 TJ Trout <tj () pcguys us> wrote:
Could this be MTU? I've tried flow control, hard code duplex, stp on/off etc I'm at a loss any ideas?
This sounds like a common problem that certain data center environments run into with 10 Gb/s and higher loads. In a nutshell, a simple throw money at it solution to the problem is to use a switch with larger buffers. Nonetheless, there are plenty of good sources of material about the phenomenon, such as: <http://fasterdata.es.net/network-tuning/router-switch-buffer-size-issues/> <https://people.ucsc.edu/~warner/buffer.html> John
Current thread:
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second, (continued)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Mikael Abrahamsson (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second TJ Trout (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Michael Loftis (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second TJ Trout (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Peter Beckman (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Michael Loftis (Nov 29)
- RE: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Luke Guillory (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second TJ Trout (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Mikael Abrahamsson (Nov 29)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Mikael Abrahamsson (Nov 30)
- Re: 10G switch drops traffic for a split second Lee (Nov 30)