Hello! Somebody definitely should build full feature router with DPDK/netmap/pf_ring :) I have finished detailed performance tests for all of them and could achieve wire speed forwarding (with simple packet rewrite and checksum calculation) with all of they. I.e. I could process 10GE and 14.6 mpps (64byte packets) on very cheap i7 3820 with single intel X540 NIC (total cost about $ 800) with CPU 70% load. But full BGP routing is a challenge but could be implemented with existing approaches like DXR: http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/papers/20120601-dxr.pdf Cheers! On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 10:11 PM, Ken Chase <math@sizone.org> wrote:
Chat in my nerds irc channel about 10G routers paralleling this
14:21 <b> the Xeon D-1540 has 8 cores / 16 threads, 2GHz base clock with 2.6GHz turbo, and dual 10G nics on chip 14:21 <b> 45W TDP 14:31 <b> supposedly an asrock board is coming that can be 10Gbase-T or SFP+ 14:58 <a> supermicro are shipping some SFP+ 10G E5 boards 15:00 <b> but the xeon E5 doesn't have the on die 10G nic 15:07 <a> X9DRW-7TPF+
http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/xeon/c600/x9drw-7tpf_.cfm
Also: 1.4Mpps per 10G link doesnt seem like the minimum packetsize one wants for handling DOS attacks, but I might be bad at math.
/kc
On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 03:46:16PM -0500, Joe Greco said:
How cheap is cheap and what performance numbers are you looking for?
About as cheap as you can get:
For about $3,000 you can build a Supermicro OEM system with an 8-core Xeon E5 V3 and 4-port 10G Intel SFP+ NIC with 8G of RAM running VyOS. The pro is that BGP convergence time will be good (better than a 7200 VXR), and number of tables likely won't be a concern since RAM is cheap. The con is that you're not doing things in hardware, so you'll have higher latency, and your PPS will be lower.
What 8 core Xeon E5 v3 would that be? The 26xx's are hideously pricey, and for a router, you're probably better off with something like a Supermicro X10SRn fsvo "n" with a Xeon E5-1650v3. Board is typically around $300, 1650 is around $550, so total cost I'm guessing closer to $1500-$2000 that route.
The edge you get there is the higher clock on the CPU. Only six cores and only 15M cache, but 3.5GHz. The E5-2643v3 is three times the cost for very similar performance specs. Costwise, E5 single socket is the way to go unless you *need* more.
... JG -- Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net "We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN) With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.
-- Ken Chase - Toronto Canada
-- Sincerely yours, Pavel Odintsov