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ANCS
2007
ACM

Experimenting with buffer sizes in routers

13 years 8 months ago
Experimenting with buffer sizes in routers
Recent theoretical results in buffer sizing research suggest that core Internet routers can achieve high link utilization, if they are capable of storing only a handful of packets. The underlying assumption is that the traffic is non-bursty, and that the system is operated below 85-90% utilization. In this paper, we present a test-bed for buffer sizing experiments using NetFPGA [2], a PCI-form factor board that contains reprogrammable FPGA elements, and four Gigabit Ethernet interfaces. We have designed and implemented a NetFPGA-based Ethernet switch with finely tunable buffer sizes, and an event capturing system to monitor buffer occupancies inside the switch. We show that reducing buffer sizes down to 20-50 packets does not necessarily degrade system performance. Categories and Subject Descriptors C.2.1 [Computer-Communication Networks]: Network Architecture and Design General Terms Experimentation, Performance
Neda Beheshti, Jad Naous, Yashar Ganjali, Nick McK
Added 12 Aug 2010
Updated 12 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where ANCS
Authors Neda Beheshti, Jad Naous, Yashar Ganjali, Nick McKeown
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