On 1/25/16 5:38 , Humberto Ramirez wrote:
> What would you say is the improvement over a standard vnic? Does it
> approach a 10G link speed?

An etherstub is a local virtual switch. VNICs can be created on top of
it like they can be created on top of normal physical devices.

When you're only focusing on loopback devices and virtio devices, link
speed is a red herring and you should just ignore it. Link speed only
matters when you have a physical device as that speed indicates the
upper band of the data rate that it can put on the wire.

If you've rigged everything up over an etherstub then you'll never go
out over the physical device; however, devices will still show a link
speed, because there's really no way not to. For example, a virtio
device in a hardware virtualized guest has no way of knowing what the
link speed of the device its going out over is. It could be 100 Mbit/s,
1 Gbit/s, 10 Gbit/s, or 40 Gbit/s, etc. and still only show the link
speed in the guest as 1 Gbit/s.

Practically, the limits of link speed for a VNIC are based on the
underlying device or the kernel data path, so it can saturate a 10
Gbit/s device. On the flip side, due to how the hardware virtualization
is currently implemented, it is unlikely that you will see speeds much
higher than 1 Gbit/s.

Robert


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