cat /boot/loader.conf.localamdtemp_load="YES"ahci_load="YES"aesni_load="YES"if_igb_load="YES"flowd_enable="YES"flowd_aggregate_enable="YES"legal.intel_igb.license_ack="1"legal.intel_ipw.license_ack="1"legal.intel_iwi.license_ack="1"# this is the magic. If you don't set this, queues won't be utilized properly# allow multiple processes for receive/transmit processing#hw.igb.rx_process_limit="-1"h#w.igb.tx_process_limit="-1"net.pf.states_hashsize="2097152"hw.igb.num_queues="0"hw.igb.enable_aim="1"hw.igb.enable_msix="1"hw.pci.enable_msix="1"hw.igb.rx_process_limit="-1"hw.igb.tx_process_limit="-1"vm.pmap.pti="0"hw.ibrs_disable="0"hint.p4tcc.0.disabled="1"hint.acpi_throttle.0.disabled="1"hint.acpi_perf.0.disabled="1"dev.igb.0.eee_control="0"dev.igb.0.fc="0"hint.p4tcc.1.disabled="1"hint.acpi_throttle.1.disabled="1"hint.acpi_perf.1.disabled="1"dev.igb.1.eee_control="0"dev.igb.1.fc="0"hint.p4tcc.2.disabled="1"hint.acpi_throttle.2.disabled="1"hint.acpi_perf.2.disabled="1"dev.igb.2.eee_control="0"dev.igb.2.fc="0"hint.p4tcc.3.disabled="1"hint.acpi_throttle.3.disabled="1"hint.acpi_perf.3.disabled="1"dev.igb.3.eee_control="0"dev.igb.3.fc="0"
~$ iperf3 -p 5200 -f m -V -c speedtest.wtnet.de -P 2 -t 10 -RTest Complete. Summary Results:[ ID] Interval Transfer Bitrate Retr[ 5] 0.00-10.03 sec 222 MBytes 186 Mbits/sec 379 sender[ 5] 0.00-10.00 sec 219 MBytes 184 Mbits/sec receiver[ 7] 0.00-10.03 sec 136 MBytes 114 Mbits/sec 38 sender[ 7] 0.00-10.00 sec 133 MBytes 112 Mbits/sec receiver[SUM] 0.00-10.03 sec 358 MBytes 299 Mbits/sec 417 sender[SUM] 0.00-10.00 sec 352 MBytes 296 Mbits/sec receiversnd_tcp_congestion cubicrcv_tcp_congestion cubic
Tempting to just sell it and recover some of the costs and going back to dd-wrt on a consumer router and get more performance, crazy right.I digress.I will try what you suggest. It'll be interesting to see what happens.Much obliged Ricardo.
Quote from: cookiemonster on June 11, 2021, 10:05:11 pmWhat I've heard is OpenWRT (being Linux based as appossed to BSD) is more performant due to better multi-threading (PPPOE's not an issue either). The thing BSD has going for it is it's network stack, it just keeps going and going. But then I've heard BSD13 has much improved multi-threading...Yep, on OpenWRT you get the full Gigabit with zero issue; the hardware is absolutely capable...
What I've heard is OpenWRT (being Linux based as appossed to BSD) is more performant due to better multi-threading (PPPOE's not an issue either). The thing BSD has going for it is it's network stack, it just keeps going and going. But then I've heard BSD13 has much improved multi-threading...