nanog mailing list archives

Re: scaling linux-based router hardware recommendations


From: Robert Bays <robert () gdk org>
Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2015 03:02:38 -0800


On Jan 27, 2015, at 8:31 AM, Jim Shankland <nanog () shankland org> wrote:

My expertise, such as it ever was, is a bit stale at this point, and my 
figures might be a little off. But I think the general principle 
applies: think about the minimum number of x86 instructions, and the 
minimum number of main memory accesses, to inspect a packet header, do a 
routing table lookup, and enqueue the packet on an outbound interface. I 
can't see that ever getting reduced to the point where a generic server 
can handle 40-byte packets at line rate (for that matter, "line rate" is 
increasing a lot faster than "speed of generic server" these days).

Using DPDK it’s possible to do everything stated and achieve 10Gbps line rate at 64byte packets on multiple interfaces 
simultaneously.  Add ACLs to the test setup and you can reach significant portions of 10Gbps at 64byte packets and full 
line rate at 128bytes.

Check out Venky Venkatesan’s presentation at the last DPDK Summit for interesting information on pps/CPU cycles and 
some of the things that can be done to optimize forwarding in a generic processor environment.

http://www.slideshare.net/jstleger/6-dpdk-summit-2014-intel-presentation-venky-venkatesan



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