Kir Kolyshkin wrote:
Herbert Poetzl wrote:
my point (until we have an implementation which clearly
shows that performance is equal/better to isolation)
is simply this:
of course, you can 'simulate' or 'construct' all the
isolation scenarios with kernel bridging and routing
and tricky injection/marking of packets, but, this
usually comes with an overhead ...
Well, TANSTAAFL*, and pretty much everything comes with an overhead.
Multitasking comes with the (scheduler, context switch, CPU cache, etc.)
overhead -- is that the reason to abandon it? OpenVZ and Linux-VServer
resource management also adds some overhead -- do we want to throw it away?
The question is not just "equal or better performance", the question is
"what do we get and how much we pay for it".
Finally, as I understand both network isolation and network
virtualization (both level2 and level3) can happily co-exist. We do have
several filesystems in kernel. Let's have several network virtualization
approaches, and let a user choose. Is that makes sense?
Definitly yes, I agree.
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