forgot to CC the list on this one...
> * also, the mtu of the bridge itself will always appear as 1500, but
> you could change that with ifconfig. Thought about having bridge mtu
> appear as min(ports mtu), but don't think that is in the current version
I tried changing the MTU > 1500 on the bridge and I get "SIOCSIFMTU: Invalid
argument" (I'm using 2.4.24 W/ latest ebtables) but if I understand you
correctly that dosen't really matter anyway.
> The bridge does not care about frame size at all. It should be able
> to handle large frames, provided:
> * all interfaces in the bridge can handle the same big mtu, there is
> no way a bridge can fragment.
That's kinda what I was afraid of... If I understand you correctly, if I
have some 100Mbit NICs in the same bridge, then even if I change the MTU of
the 1Gig NICs the MTU of packets coming in/out of the bridge will be that of
the slowest NIC (1500bytes) correct?
The reason I even care is that I am getting horrible speeds from the gigabit
NICs. In the neighborhood of about 150-200Mbps from the gigabit NICs when
doing a netcat between systems using /dev/zero -> /dev/null... That's just
crappy... even from 33Mhz PCI I should be getting like around 40-50MB/sec or
more I would think with RAM -> RAM. They're good NICs too, both EEPRO1000
using NAPI.
I can't really break up the bridges by speed either because you can't
enslave the same NICs to different bridges and I only have 1 cable modem ;)
I may have to just live with it because the bridge is working beautifully
as-is, firewalling cable modem traffic like a champ and serving files
perfectly through SAMBA too. I just don't like to leave things alone :)
Thank you for your quick reply on the last message, hopefully my questions
aren't too dumb... :)
-Chris
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Chris Shaw" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2004 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Bridge] MTU Question
> > I have a bridge that has gigabit interfaces. The machine in question has
> > the
> > fun job of being a Bridge, Firewall and SMB server. Both of the Gigabit
> > interfaces are connected to workstations directly via Xover cable (well
> > MDI-X to be exact). My question is, if I enable jumbo frames on the
> > gigabit
> > interfaces will that make any difference in overall transfer rate of the
> > bridge? I was thinking it might because even though the NIC is enslaved,
> > it
> > IS the device that the workstations communicate to. But also it might
not
> > because when applications talk to the network they're using BR(n) at
> > 1500bytes.. can a bridging guru shed some light on this for me?
> >
> > -Thank you in advance
> > Chris
>
> The bridge does not care about frame size at all. It should be able
> to handle large frames, provided:
> * all interfaces in the bridge can handle the same big mtu, there is
> no way a bridge can fragment.
> * also, the mtu of the bridge itself will always appear as 1500, but
> you could change that with ifconfig. Thought about having bridge mtu
> appear as min(ports mtu), but don't think that is in the current
version.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Bridge mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://lists.osdl.org/mailman/listinfo/bridge
Chris Shaw
IS Manager
Water Tech Industries
Phone: (888)-254-8412
Fax: (503)-261-9118
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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