I am starting this thread to share some experiences with bandwidth testing on 2.9.24. It will become more complete the more testing I document.
Using bandwidth test between 2 mikrotik routers, both running on 3.0ghz Pentium D (631). These are dual core chips but is only using single core with Mikrotik. Network cards are Intel PCIe 82573 onboard. Intel MT quad port tests will be next. Cross over cable between the two routers.
NOTE: This first testing is between 2 routers directly, not in the recommended bandwidth testing configuration. Two end bandwidth testing devices with a middle router will be used going forward. This means 2 machines generating traffic ‘thru’ the router being tested. Again, the results below are end to end bandwidth tests with only 2 routers, 1 generating packets, the other receiving them. Still pretty amazing.
128 byte packet size:
610000 p/s, 712mbps
1500 byte packet size:
80,000 p/s, 975mbps
This configuration ran solid overnight 2 days in a row. Router generating traffic was at 100% cpu, the receiving router was at 22% cpu average.
More to come - I’m just posting to brag about 610,000p/s in the first test : ) I assume if the proper bandwidth testing was setup (3 devices) I will see even better. I will test a routerboard 532 as well for comparison.
Are you noticing any variation in what the bandwidth tester is giving you for speed reports? I’m having a hard time trusting the external bandwidth tester as if I use it on 2 PCs across a MT router, it’s not always the same. For example, I have been testing queues on a bridged router, and sometimes the bandwidth is only 13Mb, sometimes it’s closer to 30Mb, without changing out anything or touching the config on the tester or the router. Running the “onboard” testers seem to be more accurate.
Anyway, just curious if you’ve noticed this at such high speeds…very nice starting point though.
Yes, the Windows version seems to stink at generating packets.
I’m going to be using the F.I.R.E. cd to generate ddos type traffic, spoofed IPs, etc to perform some of this testing as well… I’ll post the results. I need to load up the router with 100,000+ routes to see how it handles routing with a large table.
You are correct.. i originally ordered the 631 and then swapped it for the 930 chip… Figured it would come in handy once SMP was supported by MIkrotik (if ever).