The point of delayed ack's was to merge the response and the ack on
request/response
protocols like NFS or telnet. It does make sense to get it out sooner though.
Well, to a point at least - I wouldn't go so far as to suggest immediate
ACKs.
However, I was always under the impression that ACKs were sent (in the
mythical generic TCP stack) when:
a) there was data going the other way
b) there was a window update going the other way
c) the standalone ACK timer expired.
Does this patch then implement b? Were there perhaps "holes" in the
logic when things were smaller than the MTU/MSS? (-v 2 on the netperf
command line should show what the MSS was for the connection)
rick jones
BTW, many points scored for including CPU utilization and service demand
figures with the netperf output :)
[All tests run with maxcpus=1 on a 2.67GHz Woodcrest system.]
Recv Send Send Utilization Service Demand
Socket Socket Message Elapsed Send Recv Send Recv
Size Size Size Time Throughput local remote local remote
bytes bytes bytes secs. 10^6bits/s % S % S us/KB us/KB
Base (2.6.17-rc4):
default send buffer size
netperf -C -c
87380 16384 16384 10.02 14127.79 99.90 99.90 0.579 0.579
87380 16384 16384 10.02 13875.28 99.90 99.90 0.590 0.590
87380 16384 16384 10.01 13777.25 99.90 99.90 0.594 0.594
87380 16384 16384 10.02 13796.31 99.90 99.90 0.593 0.593
87380 16384 16384 10.01 13801.97 99.90 99.90 0.593 0.593
netperf -C -c -- -s 1024
87380 2048 2048 10.02 0.43 -0.04 -0.04 -7.105 -7.377
87380 2048 2048 10.02 0.43 -0.01 -0.01 -2.337 -2.620
87380 2048 2048 10.02 0.43 -0.03 -0.03 -5.683 -5.940
87380 2048 2048 10.02 0.43 -0.05 -0.05 -9.373 -9.625
87380 2048 2048 10.02 0.43 -0.05 -0.05 -9.373 -9.625
Hmm, those CPU numbers don't look right. I guess there must still be
some holes in the procstat CPU method code in netperf :(
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