I meant 10 gigabits/s and we measure 1.2 gigabits/s i.e. 12% of the available bandwidth
Andy On 07/03/2013 09:41 AM, Pieter Hintjens wrote: > Just to be sure, 10Gbps means 10 gigabits/sec, so about 1.2GBps. > Perhaps you're hitting this? > > -Pieter > > On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 8:24 AM, Andy Gotz <[email protected]> wrote: >> Dear all, >> >> I am trying to use the full bandwidth of a 10 GBps link under Windows 7 >> (32 bits) with zeromq. I do not seem to get above 1.5 GBps on average. I >> am using the remote_thr program provided as part of the zeromq >> distribution which is using push-pull. The same zeromq program uses the >> full bandwidth under Linux. >> >> Has anyone managed this under Windows 7? How did you do this? I have >> read about various tweaks to be applied under Windows but none of them >> helped so far. I would be interested in any/all tricks you applied. >> >> Thanks in advance >> >> Andy >> _______________________________________________ >> zeromq-dev mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev > _______________________________________________ > zeromq-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev -- Save our in-boxes! http://emailcharter.org _______________________________________________ zeromq-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev
