GigaRouter Latency?
Now I know a lot of people are going to jump on me for raising the latency question here, and I don't want to inflate its importance at all. Latency in a router is only somewhat important for most network applications but on some applications it has a very serious effect. If anyone would like to flame me, please do it in private email and I am sure I will find the time to get back to you :). How does the latency through a Gigarouter compare to the latency of say a NetBSD or FreeBSD box with (say) FDDI interfaces. [Ignoring the fact that most BSD boxes are running on a single PCI bus]. Basically I am curious how much advantage/disadvantage one gets by going from a Cisco to a Gigarouter solution based on issues like latency. I am sure the difference we are talking about is very slight and <2ms total, I just want to get an idea and I don't trust most of the technical sales personnel I have talked to to get a straight answer. I am very familiar with the latency of BSD (typical) boxes and those of Cisco Routers. Thanks, -Deepak.
On Sat, 19 Oct 1996, Deepak Jain wrote:
How does the latency through a Gigarouter compare to the latency of say a NetBSD or FreeBSD box with (say) FDDI interfaces. [Ignoring the fact that most BSD boxes are running on a single PCI bus]. Basically I am curious how much advantage/disadvantage one gets by going from a Cisco to a Gigarouter solution based on issues like latency. I am sure the difference we are talking about is very slight and <2ms total, I just want to get an idea and I don't trust most of the technical sales personnel I have talked to to get a straight answer. I am very familiar with the latency of BSD (typical) boxes and those of Cisco Routers.
Ok, it is MUCH lower through the Gigarouter. We were using FreeBSD systems for our routers, but are moving to the Gigarouter for bandwidth and speed. We started out netrail with cisco 4000s, but soon ran our of ram. We then had to go to a 7000 just so we could get 64 megs of ram. We thought it was lame to buy lots of cisco 7000s for only ram (we did not need the bandwidth of T3 yet). So we built our own routers, and saved lots of money. I like the Gigarouter because it is very close to my design of a router (I had this crazy idea of building our own routers/interface cards) and like the speed and idea. Nathan Stratton CEO, NetRail, Inc. Tracking the future today! --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Phone (703)524-4800 NetRail, Inc. Fax (703)534-5033 2007 N. 15 St. Suite 5 Email sales@netrail.net Arlington, Va. 22201 WWW http://www.netrail.net/ Access: (703) 524-4802 guest --------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own." Matthew 6:34
participants (2)
-
Deepak Jain
-
Nathan Stratton