On 2012-05-29, David Diggles wrote:
> I would love to get 3MB/s, but maybe 1.8MB/s is the limit of the
> realtek NIC.
There are various different realtek-based nics. rl(4) are generally quite
poor and need a fair bit of CPU power to drive. re(4) should be a bit
better. But Geode is slow anyway es
s [da...@elven.com.au]
Received: Thursday, 31 May 2012, 4:51pm
To: misc@openbsd.org [misc@openbsd.org]
Subject: Re: Tuning for pppoe over fibre 30M/1M link
FYI I have now run the same pppoe(4) download test on core2duo with OpenBSD
5.1,
on em0 interface. It beats the Mac.
Mac G5 dual core 2GHz
3MB/s
FYI I have now run the same pppoe(4) download test on core2duo with OpenBSD 5.1,
on em0 interface. It beats the Mac.
Mac G5 dual core 2GHz
3MB/s
Intel core2duo 3GHz OpenBSD i386
3.44MB/s
I have found on the Geode 300MHz, cleaning up the pf.conf, removing
modulate state, and no-df from scrub impr
On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 07:23:32PM +1000, David Diggles wrote:
[ snip ]
> http://bincrow.net/test.log
[ snip ]
Interesting, this single post got http://bincrow.net added to the Websense
blocklist.
Category:
"This Websense category is filtered: Potentially Damaging Content. Sites in
this catego
Andre, as promised;
Here are the outputs you have asked for, but on the Geode 300MHz.
Throughputs, http downloading src.tar.gz from my ISP mirror in a loop:
Tue May 29 16:33:45 EST 2012 1.84 MB/s
Tue May 29 16:35:01 EST 2012 1.86 MB/s
Tue May 29 16:36:17 EST 2012 1.87 MB/s
The same test when I
> Could you please be a bit more specific about your setup?
Sure.
> Are you using pppoe(4) or pppoe(8)?
pppoe(4)
> Do you see maxed out mbufs (netstat -m), a very high interrupt load (top
> / vmstat -i), ifq drops (sysctl net.inet.ip.ifq.drops), interface errors
> (netstat -i)?
None of the abo
Am 28.05.2012 15:26, schrieb David Diggles:
> Maybe I should try some of the kernel tuning suggested on calomel.
I would not even visit that site... It's mostly a waste of time as most
of the tunings are not up-to-date or just plain wrong. OpenBSD ships
with pretty sane defaults that normally do n
I have got it to do 10Mbps now, by ditching the "85Mbps" ethernet over
power adaptors, in favor of a cable.
I get 12Mbps if I run it to the 2.4GHz Pentium 4 xl0 100Mbps port.
No idea what is slowing it down here yet. It should be getting 30Mbps,
like it does on the Mac.
Maybe I should try some
> FWIW, I have 20M/5M VDSL service at home and have zero issue doing
> 20Mbps with OpenBSD as my pppoe-based firewall. That said, while I
> wouldn't expect a 300MHz machine to limit you to 2.4Mbps, it is a bit
> weak--and rl NICs are some of the worst out there. Curiously, when
> doing 2.4Mbps, w
Now I'm all upgraded to 5.1 I'm very happy with it all, other than a few
minor issues,
most notably:
I am still getting 300 kilobytes/second download speed with OpenBSD pppoe,
however when
I plug directly into a Mac and run pppoe on it, 3 megabytes/second.
What should I look at for tuning t
10 matches
Mail list logo