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    High number of interrupts with Jetway NF9HG-2930 (4 x Intel i211AT)

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    • ?
      Guest
      last edited by

      Does this all sound about right?

      Yep, but what is about the PowerD (hi adaptive) option?

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      • S
        SoloIT
        last edited by

        Could you please explain what PowerD is? I'm not familiar with it.

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        • S
          SoloIT
          last edited by

          I did find the PowerD setting in Advanced Misc. It is currently off. Should it on and set to HiAdaptive?

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          • ?
            Guest
            last edited by

            Could you please explain what PowerD is? I'm not familiar with it.

            It is regulating the CPU frequencies form the lower bottom to the highest top available.
            Otherwise your CPU is perhaps (not even) locked to 800MHz and if more power is needed
            it would be not able to serve! Otherwise it could be that your CPU is even and only running on
            its maximum frequency and this is also not what you will need or have.

            PowerD:

            • minimum
              even the minimum cpu frequency is used
            • maximum
              even the maximum cpu frequency is used
            • adaptive
              mixed between minimum and maximum but with a viewing eye on power saving
            • hi adaptive
              mixed between minimum and maximum but with a viewing eye on throughput

            I did find the PowerD setting in Advanced Misc. It is currently off. Should it on and set to HiAdaptive?

            Yes for sure because your CPU frequency is from 2,16GHz to 2,4GHz turbo boost mode and to get it right working
            PowerD is there, not alon for that, but also! Otherwise, likes often seen at PC Engines APU boards, you
            will perhaps your CPU even run on 600MHz or 800Mhz and if more power is really needed it could not
            be delivered by the CPU. With enabled PowerD the clock frequency is going from its minimum to its
            maximum likes the power is needed or called by the entire pfSense system.

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            • C
              cmb
              last edited by

              What does your CPU RRD look like? How much traffic through the system (throughput graph to correlate to CPU would help)?

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              • S
                SoloIT
                last edited by

                CPU almost never is getting over 20 on the graph, typically less than 10. As the CPU spikes, so does the throughput graph. When the throughput maxes out our connection, the CPU still has lots more capacity.

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                • S
                  SoloIT
                  last edited by

                  Attached are the two graphs.

                  CPU.png
                  CPU.png_thumb
                  Throughput.png
                  Throughput.png_thumb

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                  • C
                    cmb
                    last edited by

                    Looks normal, it's only an average of 2, and moves in relation to the throughput and never gets all that high.

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                    • S
                      SoloIT
                      last edited by

                      Thanks for looking. I guess it's just a different Ethernet adapter. My first pfSense hardware used Realtek adapters and when I saw any interrupt usage, the network would stall. Hence, I'm a little scared when I see any usage. Most of my other pfSense boxes do not show any interrupt usage.

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                      • ?
                        Guest
                        last edited by

                        Most of my other pfSense boxes do not show any interrupt usage.

                        If the entire rest in pfSense is running smooth and liquid I would not care about this "behavior".

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                        • C
                          cmb
                          last edited by

                          They'll all show some interrupt usage, that's part of how computers work. If your hardware's significantly oversized, especially CPU, relative to the amount of traffic you're pushing, it's probably a fraction of a percent. It's perfectly normal to have more interrupt load than that though, including well beyond what you're seeing if you start pushing a lot more traffic.

                          The interrupt load itself wasn't a problem with your Realtek NICs. Some of those NICs just fall apart under load, and the interrupt load increasing is just what happens when your NICs are under more load.

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