On 10.10.2012 00:48, Andre Tomt wrote: > On 09. okt. 2012 19:36, Jesse Brandeburg wrote: [...] >> Hints or clues (I'm trying to follow the repro steps mentioned in >> some related threads) are appreciated. In our scenario - the SuperMicro X8SIE-LN4 acts as a router.
eth0 -> uplink eth1 -> core servers network 192.168.a.b/24 eth2 -> developer employees network 192.168.c.d/24 eth1 and eth2 are hooked into (two different) HP2510-24G switches (they both show no errors at all). The switch connected to eth2 connects a bunch of developers doing day-2-day stuff (commits/checkouts/documentation/ listening to stream music/surfing/email) and the such. Continously running a ping from ie. 192.168.c.d/24 to 192.168.a.b/24 visualizes those spikes (mostly triplets, where the first echo reply is quite high and the two following replies are each around 50 percent faster - but mostly still >500ms) - whenever these spikes happen, it feels like the whole net 'stalls'. Just like Denys Fedoryshchenko stated in http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg05517.html HTH, Frank Reppin -- 43rd Law of Computing: Anything that can go wr fortune: Segmentation violation -- Core dumped ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Don't let slow site performance ruin your business. Deploy New Relic APM Deploy New Relic app performance management and know exactly what is happening inside your Ruby, Python, PHP, Java, and .NET app Try New Relic at no cost today and get our sweet Data Nerd shirt too! http://p.sf.net/sfu/newrelic-dev2dev _______________________________________________ E1000-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/e1000-devel To learn more about Intel® Ethernet, visit http://communities.intel.com/community/wired
