Card/switch performance query
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Robert G. Brown rgb at phy.duke.eduWed Aug 23 07:41:58 PDT 2000
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Dear All, We are getting ready to design and fund an upgrade for our existing Intel-based environment. I need data/advice on two issues: a) I'm generally dissatisfied with the performance of the Netgear 10/100 card -- in most of my tests it peaks out (too) far below wire speed. Some years ago I gave up 3c905's in favor of tulips because the tulips outperformed them, were cheaper, and the 3c9xx cards had endless driver problems. I'm sure the world has moved on since then. SO my question: What 10/100 cards would you (any or all of you) recommend for use in a "standard design" beowulf today? Please address price, driver/card stability with current kernels, and if at all possible, quantitative performance. I can provide scripts to generate a "sweep" of tcp streaming throughput measurements for a range of message sizes from 1 to enough bytes to encompass a standard ethernet MTU using either netperf or (preferrably) the (new) bw_tcp tool in lmbench. I find that the full sweep provides invaluable information as well as reveals potentially serious performance problems. I'd also be interested in latency measurements (lat_tcp from lmbench or request/response measurements in netperf). Since latency and throughput definitely depends on switch type, please indicate what switch type you are using and whether it is cut-through or store-and-forward. I'm particularly interested in comparative performance/reliability/cost of the current 3c905, eepro100 and tulip-ish cards but would love to hear about any others that might have emerged as strong competitors as well. b) We'll very likely be upgrading/replacing our current aged Cisco Cat 5000 switch at the same time. I expect that we'll need to support as many as 64 nodes, although to connect to the department network proper we'll probably have to go through an uplink to another (similar?) switch. The old Cisco was very nice in its day but has somewhat broken Nway and we'd definitely like to get a switch that will last and give decent (100 base) performance for the next few years. On this list and in recent discussion, the HP ProCurve 4000M has been suggested several times by fairly smart folks (with the suggestion made by Don Becker, IIRC, that one just buy two and put the cards and power supply from the second back into the first to get an 80 port chassis, rather than either get the 80 ports all at once or try to upgrade). Another more recent suggestion (from Christopher Hogue) was to get a Foundry Networks Fastiron II, which is also the OEM of the HP 9000 series. I suspect that this is out of our budget range but I'd still be interested in price/reliability/performance reports. I know this is a perennial discussion item, but I have actually searched the archives already and although there is some anecdotal stuff there there aren't many true price/reliability/performance reports, especially with quantitative reporting of the numbers. In addition to your answers getting into the archives as reports in and of their own right, I'll try to take the time to post an executive summary when the thread peters out. rgb -- Robert G. Brown http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/ Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305 Durham, N.C. 27708-0305 Phone: 1-919-660-2567 Fax: 919-660-2525 email:rgb at phy.duke.edu
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