Hi Kent, They are using the same verion of Net::SSLeay (version 1.72). All the software have the same version.
This is not random. This happens 100% of the times. All the settings related to this script are the same. I don't think it's my network card, because i can reach the maximum speed using a different application. Regards, David Santiago On Thu, 2 Jun 2016 07:40:00 +1200 Kent Fredric <kentfred...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 2 June 2016 at 06:25, David Emanuel da Costa Santiago > <deman...@gmail.com> wrote: > > The question for one million dollar is "Why?". And how can i improve > > the performance of my desktop to reach the same speed as my laptop > > (considering that i have better hardware on my desktop)? If i > > recompile perl instead of using a binary package, will that make it > > even? > > > Are they using the same SSL Implementation Version? > > Is SSL Configured identically? > > Is the recipient of the SSL connection the same recipient? > > Have you ruled out the problem being just transient ( ie: can you make > it happen reliably and repeatedly sufficient to rule out it just being > subject to randomness? I hate asking this question, but I bite this > one *constantly* because I'm really not good at identifying random ) > > Given the code of the function you are calling is an xsub, and that > xsub hooks directly into SSL, there's a lot of scope here for non-perl > to be the culprit. > > https://metacpan.org/source/MIKEM/Net-SSLeay-1.74/SSLeay.xs#L1693-1721 > > I'd also contend the possiblity your network card could be to blame, > but demonstrating that would be hard (you'd need to try performing a > reproduction of the case somehow.... good luck) > > If you persist you'll probably find the problem eventually, ... just > ... it might take a few hours. Can you afford to spend a few hours on > a 20 second difference? > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org http://learn.perl.org/