On Sun, 18 Jun 2000, Richard A. Steenbergen wrote:
The last time I tried it with standard userland transfers was on back to back p3 500s which pulled about 450Mbps between a GA620 and an Intel GE.
This is consistent with what I would have expected from a normal user application on a modern UNIX over BSD Socket API for that speed of Intel CPU. Folks using CPUs with correct byte-ordering (e.g. non-DEC MIPS, SPARC) get about 1 Mbps/MHz under UNIX. Folks seem to get about 0.8 Mbps/MHz under NT/Intel (assuming a ~1518 byte MTU).
sendfile(2) is a current off-the-shelf method to improve things dramatically. The other question is what you do with the data once you receive it (in the example of an ftp, there is no equivilent recvfile(2) to do zero copy transfers). And of course, mbufs and checksums are the rest of the problem (for BSD derivatives, linux has its own very special brand of problems :P).
I highly recommend you check out http://people.freebsd.org/~ken/zero_copy/ if you're interested in zero copy, page flipping, and performance benchmarks as it relates to FreeBSD. And with that I'll let this subject drop, before too many people without GigE decide to turn against me. :P -- Richard A Steenbergen <ras@e-gerbil.net> http://www.e-gerbil.net/humble PGP Key ID: 0x138EA177 (67 29 D7 BC E8 18 3E DA B2 46 B3 D8 14 36 FE B6)