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Full Discussion: Gigabit Link throughput
Special Forums IP Networking Gigabit Link throughput Post 302303415 by debd on Thursday 2nd of April 2009 02:43:25 PM
Old 04-02-2009
Gigabit Link throughput

As a rule of thumb in doing calculations, what figure would you use in Mbytes/sec? I know the answer varies grealty on the topolgy of the network but I wonde what newteok engineers use a rough rule of thumb?

Many thanks.
 

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TTCP(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   TTCP(1)

NAME
ttcp - test TCP and UDP performance SYNOPSIS
ttcp -t [-u] [-s] [-p port] [-l buflen] [-b size] [-n numbufs] [-A align] [-O offset] [-f format] [-D] [-v] host [<in] ttcp -r [-u] [-s] [-p port] [-l buflen] [-b size] [-A align] [-O offset] [-f format] [-B] [-T] [-v] [>out] DESCRIPTION
Ttcp times the transmission and reception of data between two systems using the UDP or TCP protocols. It differs from common ``blast'' tests, which tend to measure the remote inetd as much as the network performance, and which usually do not allow measurements at the remote end of a UDP transmission. For testing, the transmitter should be started with -t and -s after the receiver has been started with -r and -s. Tests lasting at least tens of seconds should be used to obtain accurate measurements. Graphical presentations of throughput versus buffer size for buffers rang- ing from tens of bytes to several ``pages'' can illuminate bottlenecks. Ttcp can also be used as a ``network pipe'' for moving directory hierarchies between systems when routing problems exist or when the use of other mechanisms is undesirable. For example, on the destination machine, use: ttcp -r -B | tar xvpf - and on the source machine: tar cf - directory | ttcp -t dest_machine Additional intermediate machines can be included by: ttcp -r | ttcp -t next_machine OPTIONS
-t Transmit mode. -r Receive mode. -u Use UDP instead of TCP. -s If transmitting, source a data pattern to network; if receiving, sink (discard) the data. Without the -s option, the default is to transmit data from stdin or print the received data to stdout. -l length Length of buffers in bytes (default 8192). For UDP, this value is the number of data bytes in each packet. The system limits the maximum UDP packet length. This limit can be changed with the -b option. -b size Set size of socket buffer. The default varies from system to system. This parameter affects the maximum UDP packet length. It may not be possible to set this parameter on some systems (for example, 4.2BSD). -n numbufs Number of source buffers transmitted (default 2048). -p port Port number to send to or listen on (default 2000). On some systems, this port may be allocated to another network daemon. -D If transmitting using TCP, do not buffer data when sending (sets the TCP_NODELAY socket option). It may not be possible to set this parameter on some systems (for example, 4.2BSD). -B When receiving data, output only full blocks, using the block size specified by -l. This option is useful for programs, such as tar(1), that require complete blocks. -A align Align the start of buffers to this modulus (default 16384). -O offset Align the start of buffers to this offset (default 0). For example, ``-A8192 -O1'' causes buffers to start at the second byte of an 8192-byte page. -f format Specify, using one of the following characters, the format of the throughput rates as kilobits/sec ('k'), kilobytes/sec ('K'), megabits/sec ('m'), megabytes/sec ('M'), gigabits/sec ('g'), or gigabytes/sec ('G'). The default is 'K'. -T ``Touch'' the data as they are read in order to measure cache effects. -v Verbose: print more statistics. -d Debug: set the SO_DEBUG socket option. SEE ALSO
ping(1M), traceroute(1M), netsnoop(1M) local TTCP(1)
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