💾 Archived View for spikydinosaur.com › 2021 › 11 › 10%20AWS%20bandwidth%20fibs.gmi captured on 2024-06-16 at 12:31:43. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2022-03-01)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
I'm currently running some benchmarks at work to test message throughput and latency for a specific set of scenarios. The basic architecture is producer → processor → consumer with a server dedicated to each.
The throughput is likely to be pretty high and we need reasonable spec machines (8 cores minimum) with a 10Gbit network hooking them together. Since I don't have anything like that available at home or in the office, I'm using the company AWS account to rent some.
AWS has plenty of machine sizes available, but 8 or 16 cores only promises network bandwidth "up to" 10Gbits, so I have to step up to 32 cores to get the guarantee. Not ideal but I guess we'll have to pay for cores that we're not going to use.
After a day and a half of running these tests, something seems off, and I don't think it's the test setup itself. We should be getting better throughput than this. On a hunch I decide to test the raw network performance directly with the wonderfully useful iperf3. It appears that producer → processor and processor → consumer are only operating at 5Gbits. Hmm. But somehow the producer and consumer can quite happily talk to each other at 10Gbits.
I can't find any reason for this; I end up creating new instances for the processor VM until I get one that has a 10Gbit network connection.
Bad AWS.