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SBACPAD
2007
IEEE

Architectural Breakdown of End-to-End Latency in a TCP/IP Network

13 years 10 months ago
Architectural Breakdown of End-to-End Latency in a TCP/IP Network
Adoption of the 10GbE Ethernet standard has been impeded by two important performance-oriented considerations: 1) processing requirements of common protocol stacks and 2) end-to-end latency. The overheads of typical software based protocol stacks on CPU utilization and throughput have been well evaluated in several recent studies. In this paper, we focus on end-to-end latency and present a detailed characterization across typical server system hardware and software stack components. We demonstrate that application level end-to-end latency with a 10GbE connection can be as low as 10 microseconds for a single isolated request. The paper analyzes the components of the latency and discusses possible significant variations to the components under realistic conditions. We note that methods that are used to optimize throughput can often be responsible for the perception that Ethernet based latencies can be very high. Methods to pursue reducing the minimum latency and controlling the variatio...
Steen Larsen, Parthasarathy Sarangam, Ram Huggahal
Added 04 Jun 2010
Updated 04 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where sbacpad
Authors Steen Larsen, Parthasarathy Sarangam, Ram Huggahalli
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