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scaling linux-based router hardware recommendations
- Subject: scaling linux-based router hardware recommendations
- From: swhyte at gmail.com (Scott Whyte)
- Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 15:52:49 -0800
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
On 1/26/15 14:53, micah anderson wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I know that specially programmed ASICs on dedicated hardware like Cisco,
> Juniper, etc. are going to always outperform a general purpose server
> running gnu/linux, *bsd... but I find the idea of trying to use
> proprietary, NSA-backdoored devices difficult to accept, especially when
> I don't have the budget for it.
>
> I've noticed that even with a relatively modern system (supermicro with
> a 4 core 1265LV2 CPU, with a 9MB cache, Intel E1G44HTBLK Server
> adapters, and 16gig of ram, you still tend to get high percentage of
> time working on softirqs on all the CPUs when pps reaches somewhere
> around 60-70k, and the traffic approaching 600-900mbit/sec (during a
> DDoS, such hardware cannot typically cope).
>
> It seems like finding hardware more optimized for very high packet per
> second counts would be a good thing to do. I just have no idea what is
> out there that could meet these goals. I'm unsure if faster CPUs, or
> more CPUs is really the problem, or networking cards, or just plain old
> fashioned tuning.
>
> Any ideas or suggestions would be welcome!
DPDK is your friend here.
-Scott
> micah
>