Achieving 10Gbps network processing: Are we there yet?

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Abstract

Scaling TCP/IP receive side processing to 10Gbps speeds on commercial server platforms has been a major challenge. This led to the development of two key techniques: Large Receive Offload (LRO) and Direct Cache Access (DCA). Only recently, systems supporting these two techniques have become available. So, we want to evaluate these two techniques using 10Gigabit NICs to find out if we can finally get 10Gbps rates. We evaluate these two techniques in detail to understand performance benefit offered by these two techniques and the remaining major overheads. Our measurements showed that LRO and DCA together improve TCP/IP receive performance by more than 50% over the base case (no LRO and DCA). These two techniques combined with the improvements in the CPU architecture and the rest of the platform over the last 3-4 years have more than doubled the TCP/IP receive processing throughput to 7Gbps. Our detailed architectural characterization of TCP/IP processing, with these two features enabled, has revealed that buffer management and copy operations still take up significant amount of processing time. We also analyze the scaling behavior of TCP/IP to figure out how multi-core architectures improve network processing. This part of our analysis has highlighted some limiting factors that need to be addressed to achieve scaling beyond 10Gbps. © 2008 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

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APA

Govindarajan, P., Makineni, S., Newell, D., Iyer, R., Huggahalli, R., & Kumar, A. (2008). Achieving 10Gbps network processing: Are we there yet? In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 5374 LNCS, pp. 518–528). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-89894-8_45

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