Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I just like the reference to 10G ethernet. It can't become normal soon enough.


It's ironic because I chose Linux over FreeBSD due to 10G performance. Be it a TrueNAS box with dual Xeons and Marvell 10G card or a ThinkCentre Tiny with an Intel NIC running opnSense I could never get anywhere near full 10G throughput. Switch to Linux (TrueNAS SCALE/openWrt) and it just worked at full speed.

Although the article also uses weasel words like "sufficiently good" performance so it sounds like their BSD 10G performance isn't that good either.


I can't remember the 10G firewall figures we got in testing off the top of my head, but we didn't max out the 10G network; I think we were getting somewhere in the 8G range. This is significantly better than our OpenBSD performance but not quite up to the level of full network speed or the full speed that two Linux machines can get talking directly to each other over our 10G network. I also suspect that performance depends on which specific NICs you have due to driver issues. The live performance of our deployed FreeBSD firewalls is harder to assess because people here don't push the network that hard very often (although every so often someone downloads a big thing from the right Internet source to get really good rates).

(I'm the author of the linked-to article.)




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: