OpenBSD: PF queues break the 4 Gbps barrier
undeadly.org - 148 poäng - 46 kommentarer - 22472 sekunder sedan
Kommentarer (13)
- ralferoo - 19711 sekunder sedanIn the days when even cheap consumer hardware ships with 2.5G ports, this number seems weirdly low. Does this mean that basically nobody is currently using OpenBSD in the datacentre or anywhere that might be expecting to handle 10G or higher per port, or is it just filtering that's an issue?
I'm not surprised that the issue exists as even 10 years ago these speeds were uncommon outside of the datacentre, I'm just surprised that nobody has felt a pressing enough need to fix this earlier in the previous few years.
- haunter - 12018 sekunder sedanMy local fiber finally offers 4 Gbps connection but I’m not even sure what to use it for lol. I have 2 Gbps and that's more than enough already.
- razighter777 - 1276 sekunder sedanI would love to use openbsd. I really wanna give it a try but the filesystem choices seem kinda meh. Are there any modern filesystems with good nvme and FDE support for openbsd.
- rayiner - 20427 sekunder sedanCan pf actually shape at speeds above 4 gbps?
- gigatexal - 13709 sekunder sedanIt’s still single threaded. PF in FreeBSD is multithreaded. For home wan’s I’d be using openBSD. For anything else FreeBSD.
- riteshyadav02 - 21574 sekunder sedan[dead]
- mdavidyu - 10841 sekunder sedan[dead]
- holdtman47 - 11445 sekunder sedan[dead]
- Heer_J - 15512 sekunder sedan[dead]
- Heer_J - 20293 sekunder sedan[dead]
- jamesvzb - 16251 sekunder sedan[dead]
- bell-cot - 21845 sekunder sedan"Values up to 999G are supported, more than enough for interfaces today and the future." - Article
"When we set the upper limit of PC-DOS at 640K, we thought nobody would ever need that much memory." - Bill Gates
- chokan - 14896 sekunder sedandsa
Nördnytt! 🤓