gvisor/test/benchmarks/tcp
Tony Gong 8b56b6b83b Pass address properties in a single struct
Replaced the current AddAddressWithOptions method with
AddAddressWithProperties which passes all address properties in
a single AddressProperties type. More properties that need to be
configured in the future are expected, so adding a type makes adding
them easier.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 396930729
2021-09-15 15:00:01 -07:00
..
BUILD
README.md
nsjoin.c
tcp_benchmark.sh [rack] Support running tcp_benchmarks with RACK. 2021-03-02 12:43:35 -08:00
tcp_proxy.go Pass address properties in a single struct 2021-09-15 15:00:01 -07:00

README.md

TCP Benchmarks

This directory contains a standardized TCP benchmark. This helps to evaluate the performance of netstack and native networking stacks under various conditions.

tcp_benchmark

This benchmark allows TCP throughput testing under various conditions. The setup consists of an iperf client, a client proxy, a server proxy and an iperf server. The client proxy and server proxy abstract the network mechanism used to communicate between the iperf client and server.

The setup looks like the following:

 +--------------+  (native)            +--------------+
 | iperf client |[lo @ 10.0.0.1]------>| client proxy |
 +--------------+                      +--------------+
                                    [client.0 @ 10.0.0.2]
                            (netstack)  |            |  (native)
                                        +------+-----+
                                               |
                                             [br0]
                                               |
          Network emulation applied ---> [wan.0:wan.1]
                                               |
                                             [br1]
                                               |
                                        +------+-----+
                            (netstack)  |            |  (native)
                                     [server.0 @ 10.0.0.3]
 +--------------+                      +--------------+
 | iperf server |<------[lo @ 10.0.0.4]| server proxy |
 +--------------+            (native)  +--------------+

Different configurations can be run using different arguments. For example:

  • Native test under normal internet conditions: tcp_benchmark
  • Native test under ideal conditions: tcp_benchmark --ideal
  • Netstack client under ideal conditions: tcp_benchmark --client --ideal
  • Netstack client with 5% packet loss: tcp_benchmark --client --ideal --loss 5

Use tcp_benchmark --help for full arguments.

This tool may be used to easily generate data for graphing. For example, to generate a CSV for various latencies, you might do:

rm -f /tmp/netstack_latency.csv /tmp/native_latency.csv
latencies=$(seq 0 5 50;
            seq 60 10 100;
            seq 125 25 250;
            seq 300 50 500)
for latency in $latencies; do
  read throughput client_cpu server_cpu <<< \
    $(./tcp_benchmark --duration 30 --client --ideal --latency $latency)
  echo $latency,$throughput,$client_cpu >> /tmp/netstack_latency.csv
done
for latency in $latencies; do
  read throughput client_cpu server_cpu <<< \
    $(./tcp_benchmark --duration 30 --ideal --latency $latency)
  echo $latency,$throughput,$client_cpu >> /tmp/native_latency.csv
done

Similarly, to generate a CSV for various levels of packet loss, the following would be appropriate:

rm -f /tmp/netstack_loss.csv /tmp/native_loss.csv
losses=$(seq 0 0.1 1.0;
         seq 1.2 0.2 2.0;
         seq 2.5 0.5 5.0;
         seq 6.0 1.0 10.0)
for loss in $losses; do
  read throughput client_cpu server_cpu <<< \
    $(./tcp_benchmark --duration 30 --client --ideal --latency 10 --loss $loss)
  echo $loss,$throughput,$client_cpu >> /tmp/netstack_loss.csv
done
for loss in $losses; do
  read throughput client_cpu server_cpu <<< \
    $(./tcp_benchmark --duration 30 --ideal --latency 10 --loss $loss)
  echo $loss,$throughput,$client_cpu >> /tmp/native_loss.csv
done