My planned work on networking stack
Brooks Davis
brooks at one-eyed-alien.net
Mon Mar 8 12:22:19 PST 2004
On Mon, Mar 08, 2004 at 10:24:31AM -0800, Kevin Oberman wrote:
> > Date: Sun, 07 Mar 2004 23:50:11 +0100
> > From: Andre Oppermann <andre at freebsd.org>
> > Sender: owner-freebsd-current at freebsd.org
> >
> > David Malone wrote:
> > >
> > > On Mon, Mar 01, 2004 at 11:18:34PM +0100, Andre Oppermann wrote:
> > > > [] automatically sizing TCP send buffers to achieve optimal performance
> > > > over a wide range of bw*delay situations. (in progress)
> > >
> > > Hi Andre,
> > >
> > > This reminded me - do you know what happened to the plan to implement
> > > SACK for FreeBSD? I'm working with a research group that's interested
> > > in new high speed TCP techniques and they'd prefer to work with
> > > FreeBSD, but they've been using Linux 'cos they need SACK. They
> > > might actually be interested in spending some time implementing it,
> > > if we weren't going to be clashing with anytone else.
> >
> > I don't know of any current project or effort to implement SACK on
> > FreeBSD. It is not on my todo list and it doesn't fit there. But
> > I'm available if someone wants to discuss specifics and implementation
> > details.
>
> I know that our organization would love to see SACK. Much of the
> high-performance network development that used to be on FreeBSD has
> moved to Linux simply because SACK is essential. You can't run
> trans-oceanic TCP streams of gigabit or more throughput without it.
>
> Unfortunately, SACK is often looked upon as a waste of effort to those
> who use nets in more commercial forms where aggregation of lots of small
> streams is how fat pipes are used. Research big science are about the
> only ones who have a real need for this kind of performance and it's
> growing fast. Without SACK, FreeBSD will be a non-starter for these
> purposes.
I've got a co-worker who is part of a research group at ISI that
is doing research on long fat pipes with large streams. They are
intrested in doing a SACK implementation. I hope to have some more
information later this week.
-- Brooks
--
Any statement of the form "X is the one, true Y" is FALSE.
PGP fingerprint 655D 519C 26A7 82E7 2529 9BF0 5D8E 8BE9 F238 1AD4
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