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    [solved] pfSense (2.6.0 & 22.01 ) is very slow on Hyper-V

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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      What do you guys see for these sysctls?:

      dev.hn.0.hwassist: 607<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP>
      dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
      dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
      dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 393217
      

      Please report whether or not you're hitting the issue with the values shown.

      Bob.DigB m0njiM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Bob.DigB
        Bob.Dig LAYER 8 @stephenw10
        last edited by Bob.Dig

        @stephenw10 Hittin it hard

        sysctl dev.hn.0.hwassist
        sysctl dev.hn.0.caps
        sysctl dev.hn.0.ndis_version
        sysctl dev.hn.0.nvs_version
        
        2.5.2
        dev.hn.0.hwassist: 1617<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP,CSUM_IP6_TSO>
        dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
        dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
        dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 327680
        
        2.6.0
        dev.hn.0.hwassist: 607<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP>
        dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
        dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
        dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 393217
        
        

        Although this time I haven't deactivated RSC in Windows Host.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • m0njiM
          m0nji @stephenw10
          last edited by

          @stephenw10

          RSC disabled on Hyper-V Host

          PS C:\Users\m0nji\Downloads\iperf-3.1.3-win64\iperf-3.1.3-win64> .\iperf3.exe -c 192.168.187.11 -R
          Connecting to host 192.168.187.11, port 5201
          Reverse mode, remote host 192.168.187.11 is sending
          [  4] local 192.168.189.10 port 49995 connected to 192.168.187.11 port 5201
          [ ID] Interval           Transfer     Bandwidth
          [  4]   0.00-1.00   sec  55.6 KBytes   454 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   1.00-2.01   sec  21.4 KBytes   174 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   2.01-3.00   sec  21.4 KBytes   176 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   3.00-4.00   sec  21.4 KBytes   175 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   4.00-5.00   sec  17.1 KBytes   140 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   5.00-6.00   sec  21.4 KBytes   175 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   6.00-7.00   sec  21.4 KBytes   175 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   7.00-8.01   sec  15.7 KBytes   128 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   8.01-9.00   sec  20.0 KBytes   165 Kbits/sec
          [  4]   9.00-10.00  sec  21.4 KBytes   175 Kbits/sec
          - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
          [ ID] Interval           Transfer     Bandwidth
          [  4]   0.00-10.00  sec   384 KBytes   314 Kbits/sec                  sender
          [  4]   0.00-10.00  sec   237 KBytes   194 Kbits/sec                  receiver
          
          iperf Done.
          

          pfSense 2.6.0 (hitting the issue)

          dev.hn.0.hwassist: 607<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP>
          dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 393217
          dev.hn.1.hwassist: 607<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP>
          dev.hn.1.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.1.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.1.nvs_version: 393217
          dev.hn.2.hwassist: 607<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP6_UDP,CSUM_IP6_TCP>
          dev.hn.2.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.2.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.2.nvs_version: 393217
          

          for comparision FreeBSD 12.3 (hitting the issue)

          dev.hn.0.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 393217
          dev.hn.1.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.1.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.1.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.1.nvs_version: 393217
          dev.hn.2.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.2.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.2.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.2.nvs_version: 393217
          

          FreeBSD 13.0 (not hitting the issue but obviously not STABLE version)

          dev.hn.0.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.0.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.0.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.0.nvs_version: 327680
          dev.hn.1.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.1.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.1.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.1.nvs_version: 327680
          dev.hn.2.hwassist: 17<CSUM_IP,CSUM_IP_UDP,CSUM_IP_TCP,CSUM_IP_TSO>
          dev.hn.2.caps: 7ff<VLAN,MTU,IPCS,TCP4CS,TCP6CS,UDP4CS,UDP6CS,TSO4,TSO6,HASHVAL,UDPHASH>
          dev.hn.2.ndis_version: 6.30
          dev.hn.2.nvs_version: 327680
          

          Intel i3-N305 / 4 x 2.5Gbe LAN @2.7.2-Release
          WAN: Vodafone 1000/50, Telekom 250/40; Switch: USW Enterprise 8 PoE, USW Flex XG, US-8-60W; Wifi: Unifi 6 Lite AP, U6 Mesh

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • Bob.DigB
            Bob.Dig LAYER 8
            last edited by Bob.Dig

            I figured out an interim solution for me. I created two external Switches, one for pfSense and one for all the other VMs. With that it does work, no slow speed anymore. Drawback is, it is using one more port and everything goes through a physical Switch.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stephenw10S
              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
              last edited by

              So that's no routing between VMs in the same host? That seems like it's what should trigger this.

              Bob.DigB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Bob.DigB
                Bob.Dig LAYER 8 @stephenw10
                last edited by Bob.Dig

                @stephenw10 I think the key point is that pfsense is not using the same vSwitch then the others. This is an untypical setup and no one with a right mind would do it like this, but I did. And it does work here. I think I simulated "having two (vm) hosts", where it is natural, that the VMs can't use the same vSwitch.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Bob.DigB
                  Bob.Dig LAYER 8
                  last edited by

                  It feels like coming home, finally. 🤗

                  yeha.png

                  Still hope for a real fix to that situation some have for the future.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • i386DXI
                    i386DX
                    last edited by

                    Set-VMSwitch -Name "*" -EnableSoftwareRsc $false
                    
                    Get-VMNetworkAdapter -VMName "vmname" | Where-Object {$_.MacAddress -eq "yourmacaddress"} | Set-VMNetworkAdapter -RscEnabled $false
                    

                    Seems to have worked for restoring both my wan upload and inter vlan throughput. Is there any official guidance on this?

                    m0njiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • N
                      n1ck31 @DD
                      last edited by

                      @dd Did you downgrade without a reinstall? The one time I forgot to take a snapshot and now I'm left with dialup speeds on my 10G server.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • m0njiM
                        m0nji @i386DX
                        last edited by m0nji

                        @i386dx said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                        damn this did the trick right now

                        Get-VMNetworkAdapter -VMName "vmname" | Where-Object {$_.MacAddress -eq "yourmacaddress"} | Set-VMNetworkAdapter -RscEnabled $false
                        

                        we were just concentrating of disabling RSC on the vSwitch but there is also a variable for the VMs.
                        so the workaround should be:

                        1. disable RSC support on the vSwitch
                        Set-VMSwitch -Name "vSwitchName" -SoftwareRscEnabled $false
                        
                        1. disable RSC support on the VM
                        Get-VMNetworkAdapter -VMName "VMname" | Set-VMNetworkAdapter -RscEnabled $false
                        

                        one important side note: right now, you have to enable & disable RSC on the VM after every VM reboot even when the value is still $false!
                        at least on my host...

                        Intel i3-N305 / 4 x 2.5Gbe LAN @2.7.2-Release
                        WAN: Vodafone 1000/50, Telekom 250/40; Switch: USW Enterprise 8 PoE, USW Flex XG, US-8-60W; Wifi: Unifi 6 Lite AP, U6 Mesh

                        i386DXI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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                        • i386DXI
                          i386DX @m0nji
                          last edited by

                          @m0nji said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                          one important side note: right now, you have to enable & disable RSC on the VM after every VM reboot even when the value is still $false!
                          at least on my host...

                          Yes, same behaviour on my host too (Windows server 2022, gen2 vm, I350-T2 adapter, sr-iov unavailable, vmq disabled).
                          In my case I could even leave -SoftwareRscEnabled enabled on the vswitches and just flip -RscEnabled on and off on the vm network adapter(s) to restore normal bandwidth.

                          Unfortunately I'm not aware if there are ways to enforce nvs version 5 (327680) on the hn driver.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • stephenw10S
                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                            last edited by

                            Indeed I was hoping there would be some way to force it but I don't see any way.

                            m0njiM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • m0njiM
                              m0nji @stephenw10
                              last edited by

                              @stephenw10
                              we should keep an eye on this: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29075?id=85183

                              Intel i3-N305 / 4 x 2.5Gbe LAN @2.7.2-Release
                              WAN: Vodafone 1000/50, Telekom 250/40; Switch: USW Enterprise 8 PoE, USW Flex XG, US-8-60W; Wifi: Unifi 6 Lite AP, U6 Mesh

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • D
                                Drumdevil
                                last edited by Drumdevil

                                I have two Server 2019 hosts (Host1 & Host2) in my homelab, with both the same hardware. Both experienced slow WAN speeds since the update to 2.6. Normally WAN would reach about 1 Gbit, but after the update it was only about 30 Mbit. The servers each have two separate virtual switches for LAN and WAN. Inter-VLAN communication was as expected in 2.6.

                                The virtual switches are attached as follows:

                                • WAN vSwitch -> Intel Pro/1000 PT, not shared with host
                                • LAN vSwitch -> Microsoft Network Adapter Multiplexer Driver -> NIC Team, static teaming, dynamic load balance

                                On both hosts I did:

                                Get-VMSwitch | Set-VMSwitch -SoftwareRscEnabled $false
                                

                                Then I confirmed both servers returned False for both switches using:

                                Get-VMSwitch | Select-Object *RSC*
                                

                                This fixed the issue on Host1. On Host2, now the WAN speeds were OK too, BUT: Inter-VRF traffic became insanely slow. After troubleshooting I found that the only difference was that Host2 was more recently installed and had yet to get a bunch of Windows updates. I couldn't tell you which one it was, but the updates fixed it.

                                So if you have inter-VLAN performance issues after disabling RSC, try installing Windows updates.

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                                • F
                                  fiblimitless @Drumdevil
                                  last edited by

                                  @drumdevil said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                  installing Windows updates.

                                  For anyone who is having throttled uploads. I found a fix.

                                  Go to the your vNIC Properties > Configure > Advanced, and disable "Large Send Offload Version 2" for IPv4/ IPv6, and the upload speed goes back to normal.

                                  I think this also will fix your inter-VLAN performance after disabling RSC.

                                  m0njiM B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • m0njiM
                                    m0nji @fiblimitless
                                    last edited by

                                    @fiblimitless said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                    @drumdevil said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                    installing Windows updates.

                                    For anyone who is having throttled uploads. I found a fix.

                                    Go to the your vNIC Properties > Configure > Advanced, and disable "Large Send Offload Version 2" for IPv4/ IPv6, and the upload speed goes back to normal.

                                    I think this also will fix your inter-VLAN performance after disabling RSC.

                                    Cannot confirm this. I still need to enable & disable RSC on the VM after every VM Reboot!
                                    Just for Clarification: I disabled Large Send Offload on the virtual Switch and the physical NIC. But i didnt reboot the host yet.

                                    Intel i3-N305 / 4 x 2.5Gbe LAN @2.7.2-Release
                                    WAN: Vodafone 1000/50, Telekom 250/40; Switch: USW Enterprise 8 PoE, USW Flex XG, US-8-60W; Wifi: Unifi 6 Lite AP, U6 Mesh

                                    Bob.DigB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Bob.DigB
                                      Bob.Dig LAYER 8 @m0nji
                                      last edited by Bob.Dig

                                      @m0nji said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                      Just for Clarification: I disabled Large Send Offload on the virtual Switch and the physical NIC. But i didnt reboot the host yet.

                                      I think he meant the NIC in the vms, pretty easy to do that for a windows vm, more hard on a linux machine without GUI I guess. That's why I have not tested this.

                                      I have my wacky solution for now using two external switches and wait for a permanent solution, probably coming with 2.7... lets hope.

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                                      • B
                                        bimmerdriver @fiblimitless
                                        last edited by bimmerdriver

                                        @fiblimitless said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                        @drumdevil said in After Upgrade inter (V)LAN communication is very slow (on Hyper-V).:

                                        installing Windows updates.

                                        For anyone who is having throttled uploads. I found a fix.

                                        Go to the your vNIC Properties > Configure > Advanced, and disable "Large Send Offload Version 2" for IPv4/ IPv6, and the upload speed goes back to normal.

                                        I think this also will fix your inter-VLAN performance after disabling RSC.

                                        I tried your suggestion, but it made no difference. I'm experiencing erratic dead slow uploads and downloads. Is it necessary to reboot after making this change?

                                        I'm running pfSense 2.6.0 on Windows Server 2019 in a Generation 2 VM. There are virtual switches on the WAN and LAN. The WAN and LAN NICs are Intel I350. Not using VLANs. VMQ, IPsec task offloading, SR-IOV enabled.

                                        F i386DXI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • F
                                          fiblimitless @bimmerdriver
                                          last edited by fiblimitless

                                          @bimmerdriver
                                          I have same system as you except for SR-IOV I have it disabled.

                                          For the download as mentioned before disable RSC via powershell.
                                          For the uploads: Make sure you disable Large Send Offload v2 on the
                                          virtual Switch and the physical NIC on the Host Machine.

                                          No boot needed, maybe disable/enable NICs.

                                          If that doesn't work, start disabling all these offload options you'll find in the v/NICs properties. and see if the speed goes back to normal. then work your way through by enabling them one by one. until you find the cause.

                                          I'v had a previous experience with win2016 when it was in preview, with regular Windows VM on Hyper-V. The speed was so slow, and had this offloading disabled, until Microsoft pushed an update and fixed it, or it was a NIC driver update. I don't remember.

                                          .

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                                          • i386DXI
                                            i386DX @bimmerdriver
                                            last edited by

                                            @bimmerdriver did you try flipping -RscEnabled on and off on your pfsense vm network adapters?
                                            This fixes both wan upload and inter vlan bandwidth for me on ws 2022.

                                            I ended up scheduling this at startup until a fix is available:

                                            Start-Sleep -Seconds 120 ; `
                                            Get-VMNetworkAdapter -VMName "yourvmname" | Set-VMNetworkAdapter -RscEnabled $true ; `
                                            Start-Sleep -Seconds 10 ; `
                                            Get-VMNetworkAdapter -VMName "yourvmname" | Set-VMNetworkAdapter -RscEnabled $false
                                            
                                            Bob.DigB B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
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