I have about 10 Vmware ROS VM's and when I did testing previously I could get up around 1Gb/s But where I have failed recently is VMWare can drop inbound packets if the rx queue gets full and the only way to find this is via esxtop or esxcli ... you need to investigate the actual portgroup. Would me nice if they would allow us to modify the rx buffer size, but .. Alex -----Original Message----- From: Public [mailto:public-bounces@talk.mikrotik.com.au] On Behalf Of Mike Everest Sent: Tuesday, 25 August 2015 11:23 AM To: 'MikroTik Australia Public List' <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> Subject: Re: [MT-AU Public] vmxnet3 in ROS now Actually I retract my last comment :-} Interfaces on our zettagrid platform show up as 100mbps, but interfaces on our local vsphere platform, interfaces connect at 1gbps, and btest to a local router give gb speeds :) Cheers, Mike.
-----Original Message----- From: Public [mailto:public-bounces@talk.mikrotik.com.au] On Behalf Of Mike Everest Sent: Tuesday, 25 August 2015 11:16 AM To: 'MikroTik Australia Public List' <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> Subject: Re: [MT-AU Public] vmxnet3 in ROS now
Yes - ditto,
Ethernet drivers are 100mbps ;)
Cheers!
-----Original Message----- From: Public [mailto:public-bounces@talk.mikrotik.com.au] On Behalf Of Damien Gardner Jnr Sent: Tuesday, 25 August 2015 11:12 AM To: MikroTik Australia Public List <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> Subject: Re: [MT-AU Public] vmxnet3 in ROS now
If it's anything like under XenServer, you'll be limited to 100mbps (Xenserver shows 100mbps media to the HVM guest unless they're using Citrix's drivers). Using virtio I max out around 900mbps each direction.
On 25 August 2015 at 10:55, Purdon, Bob <bobp@purdon.id.au> wrote:
Whatever the reason, it is certainly a very interesting and cool development - there are a growing number of RouterOS deployments like
this,
and it will definitely be one to watch! :)
Out of interest, what level of performance should I expect if I were to deploy RouterOS on an ESX server without the vmxnet3 driver?
The use case here is as a home router - I currently use an RB1100, which routes my NBN connection with no issues, and handles routing between 3 VLANs. I often move 600-800 megabits within a VLAN, but traffic routed between VLANs is rarely more than 5-10mbps.
Not sure I want to operate my router as a VM yet - introduces various new failure modes - but am curious what the performance would look like if I were to try it. _______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com. au
--
Damien Gardner Jnr VK2TDG. Dip EE. GradIEAust rendrag@rendrag.net - http://www.rendrag.net/ -- We rode on the winds of the rising storm, We ran to the sounds of thunder. We danced among the lightning bolts, and tore the world asunder _______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com. au
_______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com.au
_______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com.au