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hoping for 10Gbps, getting sub 1Gbps speed Xeon E3-1270 v5 3.6GHz

General pfSense Questions
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  • S
    SpaceBass @stephenw10
    last edited by May 4, 2023, 9:11 PM

    @stephenw10 thanks - if I want to add the full (supposed) 8 queues, how would I go about it?

    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
    • S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by May 4, 2023, 9:13 PM

      How many queues are you getting?

      It's probably a sysctl or loader tunable for that driver. Without having one to test it's difficult to say.
      Try sysctl hw.ql or maybe sysctl hw.qlxgb and see what values exist.

      Also check sysctl dev.ql.0

      S 1 Reply Last reply May 4, 2023, 11:07 PM Reply Quote 0
      • S
        SpaceBass @stephenw10
        last edited by May 4, 2023, 11:07 PM

        @stephenw10 said in hoping for 10Gbps, getting sub 1Gbps speed Xeon E3-1270 v5 3.6GHz:

        sysctl dev.ql.0

        that's the key ... no mq options there though and I dont see any listed in the readme.txt in the driver's source.

        I'll wait for the Intel NIC and see what I can get out of that

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by May 5, 2023, 11:10 AM

          How many queues is it using by default? If it's just 1 that would explain the single threaded performance.

          S 1 Reply Last reply May 5, 2023, 3:42 PM Reply Quote 0
          • S
            SpaceBass @stephenw10
            last edited by May 5, 2023, 3:42 PM

            @stephenw10 I'll fire the box up and check ... just curious, what am I looking for in the output of sysctl? I didn't see anything with 'mq' or 'queues' in the output when I first checked.

            perhaps related - what does it tell us that I get closer to 4Gbps with the -R flag on iperf3 (eg inbound) vs 2Gbps without the flag?

            I'm not overly determined to make this Qlogic card work, but this is a really good learning opportunity and I'm enjoying the process.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • S
              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
              last edited by May 5, 2023, 5:07 PM

              You might have more Rx queues than Tx queues for example. Most drivers show that in the boot logs but I'm not sure qlxb does. vmstat -i may also show it.

              S 1 Reply Last reply May 5, 2023, 6:12 PM Reply Quote 0
              • S
                SpaceBass @stephenw10
                last edited by May 5, 2023, 6:12 PM

                @stephenw10
                Thanks for the continued help...

                Here's what I see

                dev.ql.0.wake: 0
                dev.ql.0.num_sds_rings: 4
                dev.ql.0.num_rds_rings: 2
                dev.ql.0.free_pkt_thres: 1024
                dev.ql.0.snd_pkt_thres: 16
                dev.ql.0.rcv_pkt_thres_d: 32
                dev.ql.0.rcv_pkt_thres: 128
                dev.ql.0.jumbo_replenish: 2
                dev.ql.0.std_replenish: 8
                dev.ql.0.debug: 0
                dev.ql.0.fw_version: 4.16.50.1401759177
                dev.ql.0.stats: 0
                dev.ql.0.%parent: pci2
                dev.ql.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x1077 device=0x8020 subvendor=0x103c subdevice=0x3733 class=0x020000
                dev.ql.0.%location: slot=0 function=0 dbsf=pci0:2:0:0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.PEG1.PEGP
                dev.ql.0.%driver: ql
                dev.ql.0.%desc: Qlogic ISP 80xx PCI CNA Adapter-Ethernet Function v1.1.36
                

                I'm having trouble finding much documentation online for this driver... would snd_pkt_thres be the number of threads it is able to or currently using for the outbound queues?

                Here's the output from a TrueNAS box with the same card which has no trouble moving 10Gbps traffic:

                dev.ql.0.%desc: Qlogic ISP 80xx PCI CNA Adapter-Ethernet Function v1.1.36
                root@matterhorn[~]# sysctl sysctl dev.ql.1
                dev.ql.1.num_sds_rings: 4
                dev.ql.1.num_rds_rings: 2
                dev.ql.1.free_pkt_thres: 1024
                dev.ql.1.snd_pkt_thres: 16
                dev.ql.1.rcv_pkt_thres_d: 32
                dev.ql.1.rcv_pkt_thres: 128
                dev.ql.1.jumbo_replenish: 2
                dev.ql.1.std_replenish: 8
                dev.ql.1.debug: 0
                dev.ql.1.fw_version: 4.20.1.1429931003
                dev.ql.1.stats: 0
                
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S
                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                  last edited by May 5, 2023, 6:18 PM

                  Mmm, so likely those are the default values. There should be a description of each tunable if you run: sysctl -d dev.ql.0

                  S 1 Reply Last reply May 5, 2023, 6:23 PM Reply Quote 0
                  • S
                    SpaceBass @stephenw10
                    last edited by SpaceBass May 5, 2023, 6:29 PM May 5, 2023, 6:23 PM

                    @stephenw10 said in hoping for 10Gbps, getting sub 1Gbps speed Xeon E3-1270 v5 3.6GHz:

                    sysctl -d dev.ql.0

                    well that's a helpful command! thanks

                    still not seeing anything about queues though :/

                    dev.ql.0:
                    dev.ql.0.wake: Device set to wake the system
                    dev.ql.0.num_sds_rings: Number of Status Descriptor Rings
                    dev.ql.0.num_rds_rings: Number of Rcv Descriptor Rings
                    dev.ql.0.free_pkt_thres: Threshold for # of packets to free at a time
                    dev.ql.0.snd_pkt_thres: Threshold for # of snd packets
                    dev.ql.0.rcv_pkt_thres_d: Threshold for # of rcv pkts to trigger indication defered
                    dev.ql.0.rcv_pkt_thres: Threshold for # of rcv pkts to trigger indication isr
                    dev.ql.0.jumbo_replenish: Threshold for Replenishing Jumbo Frames
                    dev.ql.0.std_replenish: Threshold for Replenishing Standard Frames
                    dev.ql.0.debug: Debug Level
                    dev.ql.0.fw_version: firmware version
                    dev.ql.0.stats: Statistics
                    dev.ql.0.%parent: parent device
                    dev.ql.0.%pnpinfo: device identification
                    dev.ql.0.%location: device location relative to parent
                    dev.ql.0.%driver: device driver name
                    dev.ql.0.%desc: device description
                    

                    Also, interesting, when I do an iperf3 with -R here's the top output on the pfSense box...

                    CPU 0:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice,  1.9% system, 86.5% interrupt, 11.6% idle
                    CPU 1:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  8.1% system,  2.7% interrupt, 88.8% idle
                    CPU 2:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice,  5.8% system, 54.8% interrupt, 39.4% idle
                    CPU 3:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  8.5% system,  6.6% interrupt, 84.6% idle
                    CPU 4:  0.8% user,  0.0% nice, 25.9% system,  6.2% interrupt, 67.2% idle
                    CPU 5:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice, 21.6% system,  7.3% interrupt, 70.7% idle
                    CPU 6:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  0.8% system, 51.4% interrupt, 47.5% idle
                    CPU 7:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  5.4% system,  8.9% interrupt, 85.3% idle
                    Mem: 305M Active, 201M Inact, 872M Wired, 14G Free
                    ARC: 404M Total, 63M MFU, 336M MRU, 32K Anon, 1218K Header, 3853K Other
                         122M Compressed, 283M Uncompressed, 2.31:1 Ratio
                    Swap: 1024M Total, 1024M Free
                    
                      PID USERNAME    PRI NICE   SIZE    RES STATE    C   TIME    WCPU COMMAND
                       12 root        -92    -     0B   528K CPU0     0   0:32  90.84% [intr{irq265: ql0}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU1     1  45:28  87.99% [idle{idle: cpu1}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU7     7  45:32  86.71% [idle{idle: cpu7}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU3     3  45:28  83.73% [idle{idle: cpu3}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      5  45:17  71.47% [idle{idle: cpu5}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU4     4  45:15  70.76% [idle{idle: cpu4}]
                       12 root        -92    -     0B   528K CPU2     2   0:24  60.84% [intr{irq266: ql0}]
                        0 root        -92    -     0B  1376K -        6   0:31  54.00% [kernel{ql1 txq}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      6  44:26  48.31% [idle{idle: cpu6}]
                       12 root        -92    -     0B   528K WAIT     6   0:49  43.46% [intr{irq268: ql1}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      2  44:57  37.84% [idle{idle: cpu2}]
                       12 root        -92    -     0B   528K WAIT     6   0:49  23.37% [intr{irq264: ql0}]
                       11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      0  45:02  12.88% [idle{idle: cpu0}]
                        0 root        -92    -     0B  1376K -        7   0:07  12.82% [kernel{ql0 rcvq}]
                        0 root        -92    -     0B  1376K -        1   0:12   5.35% [kernel{ql1 rcvq}]
                    99487 avahi        20    0    13M  4500K select   5   0:06   2.82% avahi-daemon: running [washington.local]
                       12 root        -92    -     0B   528K WAIT     4   0:20   2.34% [intr{irq267: ql0}]
                        0 root        -92    -     0B  1376K -        1   0:11   1.83% [kernel{ql0 txq}]
                    
                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • S
                      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                      last edited by May 5, 2023, 6:36 PM

                      Well at least 4 IRQs for ql0 there. Does vmstat -i show those?

                      Nothing about queues there I agree. That's the sort of setting that would usually be a loader value though. Those are usually shown in hw.ql but only values that are set are shown.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • S
                        SpaceBass
                        last edited by May 6, 2023, 10:15 PM

                        @stephenw10

                        Intel X520-da2 update

                        tl;dr better performance for sure, but still not 10Gbps. 8 CPU cores, each NIC using 4 queues.

                        I'm increasingly of the opinion that even with a beefy CPU pfSense just doesnt like doing 10Gbps 😂

                        iperf3
                        iperf3 -c ISP's server -P 10

                        [SUM]   0.00-10.00  sec  5.64 GBytes  4.84 Gbits/sec  1455             sender
                        [SUM]   0.00-10.03  sec  5.63 GBytes  4.82 Gbits/sec                  receiver
                        

                        iperf3 -c ISP's server -P 10 -R

                        [SUM]   0.00-10.03  sec  5.18 GBytes  4.43 Gbits/sec  4033             sender
                        [SUM]   0.00-10.00  sec  5.14 GBytes  4.42 Gbits/sec                  receiver
                        

                        iperf3 -c local server on other vLAN -P 18

                        [SUM]   0.00-10.00  sec  5.40 GBytes  4.64 Gbits/sec  11944             sender
                        [SUM]   0.00-10.01  sec  5.39 GBytes  4.62 Gbits/sec                  receiver
                        

                        top

                        last pid: 52809;  load averages:  0.71,  0.41,  0.36                             up 0+00:28:16  16:09:59
                        742 threads:   10 running, 699 sleeping, 33 waiting
                        CPU 0:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice, 31.1% system,  0.0% interrupt, 68.9% idle
                        CPU 1:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice,  0.0% system,  0.0% interrupt,  100% idle
                        CPU 2:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  3.9% system,  0.0% interrupt, 95.7% idle
                        CPU 3:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  0.4% system,  0.0% interrupt, 99.2% idle
                        CPU 4:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice, 75.2% system,  0.0% interrupt, 24.8% idle
                        CPU 5:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice,  0.0% system,  0.0% interrupt, 99.6% idle
                        CPU 6:  0.4% user,  0.0% nice, 75.6% system,  0.0% interrupt, 24.0% idle
                        CPU 7:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice,  0.4% system,  0.0% interrupt, 99.6% idle
                        Mem: 297M Active, 178M Inact, 920M Wired, 14G Free
                        ARC: 384M Total, 53M MFU, 326M MRU, 32K Anon, 1086K Header, 3216K Other
                             118M Compressed, 268M Uncompressed, 2.27:1 Ratio
                        Swap: 1024M Total, 1024M Free
                        
                          PID USERNAME    PRI NICE   SIZE    RES STATE    C   TIME    WCPU COMMAND
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU7     7  27:56  99.89% [idle{idle: cpu7}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU5     5  27:55  99.73% [idle{idle: cpu5}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU3     3  27:56  99.16% [idle{idle: cpu3}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU1     1  27:55  99.14% [idle{idle: cpu1}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      2  26:31  95.65% [idle{idle: cpu2}]
                            0 root        -76    -     0B  1376K -        6   1:13  78.85% [kernel{if_io_tqg_6}]
                            0 root        -76    -     0B  1376K CPU4     4   1:16  72.63% [kernel{if_io_tqg_4}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      0  26:34  69.36% [idle{idle: cpu0}]
                            0 root        -76    -     0B  1376K -        0   1:27  30.30% [kernel{if_io_tqg_0}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K RUN      4  26:34  27.30% [idle{idle: cpu4}]
                           11 root        155 ki31     0B   128K CPU6     6  26:57  21.08% [idle{idle: cpu6}]
                            0 root        -76    -     0B  1376K -        2   1:40   3.32% [kernel{if_io_tqg_2}]
                        67535 unbound      20    0   107M    54M kqread   4   0:02   0.40% /usr/local/sbin/unbound -c /var/unbox
                        

                        dmesg

                        root: dmesg | grep queues
                        ix0: Using 4 RX queues 4 TX queues
                        ix0: allocated for 4 queues
                        ix0: allocated for 4 rx queues
                        ix0: netmap queues/slots: TX 4/2048, RX 4/2048
                        ix1: Using 4 RX queues 4 TX queues
                        ix1: allocated for 4 queues
                        ix1: allocated for 4 rx queues
                        ix1: netmap queues/slots: TX 4/2048, RX 4/2048
                        
                        O 1 Reply Last reply May 7, 2023, 7:27 AM Reply Quote 1
                        • O
                          ogghi @SpaceBass
                          last edited by May 7, 2023, 7:27 AM

                          @spacebass
                          Pretty exactly the same on my end. I will now try to get in touch with our ISP again to make sure it's not their core router being the culprit here!

                          https://www.reddit.com/r/PFSENSE/comments/137iv07/comment/jj6oqw4/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • C
                            Cool_Corona
                            last edited by Cool_Corona May 7, 2023, 8:22 AM May 7, 2023, 8:22 AM

                            Are you guys using SATA on your hardware??

                            Remember there is a 6gbit/s limit to that when writing to the disk sybsystem.

                            And I bet that is what you see.

                            IN short... your NIC is pushing the limits of the disk subsystem.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • O
                              ogghi
                              last edited by May 7, 2023, 8:31 AM

                              It is, but pFsense should not write data to disk while transferring?!
                              Or better, not the data it is routing through!

                              C 1 Reply Last reply May 7, 2023, 2:16 PM Reply Quote 1
                              • C
                                Cool_Corona @ogghi
                                last edited by May 7, 2023, 2:16 PM

                                @ogghi But youre downloading a file to test IPERF. Guess where that is written?

                                S S 2 Replies Last reply May 7, 2023, 2:33 PM Reply Quote 0
                                • S
                                  SpaceBass @Cool_Corona
                                  last edited by May 7, 2023, 2:33 PM

                                  @cool_corona if that were the case, hosts on the same network would also be bottlenecked.

                                  C O 2 Replies Last reply May 7, 2023, 8:18 PM Reply Quote 1
                                  • S
                                    SteveITS Galactic Empire @Cool_Corona
                                    last edited by May 7, 2023, 3:41 PM

                                    @cool_corona Don’t run speed tests on pfSense if at all possible, use a host behind it. Then it (also) isn’t using CPU cycles on the test.

                                    Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
                                    When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
                                    Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • C
                                      Cool_Corona @SpaceBass
                                      last edited by May 7, 2023, 8:18 PM

                                      @spacebass Why?? doesnt pass through pfsense?

                                      R 1 Reply Last reply May 7, 2023, 8:23 PM Reply Quote 0
                                      • R
                                        rcoleman-netgate Netgate @Cool_Corona
                                        last edited by May 7, 2023, 8:23 PM

                                        @cool_corona It's a single NIC route. If you want to test throughput you should test the THROUGH part of it

                                        Ryan
                                        Repeat, after me: MESH IS THE DEVIL! MESH IS THE DEVIL!
                                        Requesting firmware for your Netgate device? https://go.netgate.com
                                        Switching: Mikrotik, Netgear, Extreme
                                        Wireless: Aruba, Ubiquiti

                                        C 1 Reply Last reply May 7, 2023, 9:08 PM Reply Quote 0
                                        • C
                                          Cool_Corona @rcoleman-netgate
                                          last edited by May 7, 2023, 9:08 PM

                                          @rcoleman-netgate

                                          Hardware

                                          pfSense box

                                          Dell R230 Xeon E3-1270 v5 @ 3.6GHz
                                          16GB
                                          2x Samsung 850 SSD in ZFS redundant pool
                                          HP NC523SPF NIC in PCIe port 2 (which I believe is full 16 lanes)
                                          

                                          switches & cables & optics

                                          unifi aggregation 10G switches
                                          Intel 850mm SFP+ optics
                                          mm patch cables (same ones used to get faster results with 6100)
                                          

                                          Testing
                                          iperf3:
                                          iperf3 -c server.fqdn.foo.bar -P 10
                                          iperf3 -c server.fqdn.foo.bar -P 10 -R
                                          iperf3 -c server.fqdn.foo.bar -P 10 -6

                                          As I see it, when tested on LAN the traffic never reaches pfsense.

                                          Its only throughput on pfsense thats the issue and could be disk subsystem related on the pfsense hardware if offloading is disabled.

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