oletuv
Regular Contributor
Jolly good then!-----
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- It's way faster
- It hasn't crashed
Jolly good then!-----
-----
- It's way faster
- It hasn't crashed
Jolly good then!
FWIW - some reports are suggesting that the 2440 might not be up for a full-on Gigabit connection, which the next step up would be the RCE-VE 4860, which has two more cores, more ram, and a bit higher clock speed...
pfSense doesn't advertise 2440 as gigabit WAN capable. They does mention that for 4860. That's the fun part if we read between the lines.
I think the two extra cores play little on achieving gigabit WAN. Higher clock speed perhaps. Maybe you can prove 2440 capable of gigabit WAN in a lab setup when you have time...those reports calming not possible maybe got the configs sub-optimal.
I would like to see how well pfsense does with latency.
What kinds of latency are you looking for? Define them first. We can ask sfx to test and report back...
the long latency you see here on part of the graph below is a client talking to a media server in japan...
View attachment 5936
What kinds of latency are you looking for? Define them first. We can ask sfx to test and report back...
I was using latency in the general sense. It would be nice to have a pfsense compared on the router graphs here since they are our standard. The faster the clock the less latency between clock tics. This is small but there are lots of things which impact latency. I guess you can add instruction set and the quality of programming, etc. By instruct set I mean some CPUs can preform an operation in one clock tic whereas other CPUs may take several clock tics. Over all it makes a difference. The end result is what they can do on the router graphs which is the sum of all things for that device.
I was using latency in the general sense. It would be nice to have a pfsense compared on the router graphs here since they are our standard. The faster the clock the less latency between clock tics. This is small but there are lots of things which impact latency. I guess you can add instruction set and the quality of programming, etc. By instruct set I mean some CPUs can preform an operation in one clock tic whereas other CPUs may take several clock tics. Over all it makes a difference. The end result is what they can do on the router graphs which is the sum of all things for that device.
10 packets transmitted, 10 packets received, 0% packet loss, time 8992ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev 0.082/0.138/0.192/0.045 ms
10 packets transmitted, 10 packets received, 0% packet loss, time 8997ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev 0.088/0.137/0.201/0.043 ms
My pfSense box usually has the CPUs down-clocked to 349Mhz (from 2.8Ghz). When I used powerd to force the CPU to max clock, the ping was virtually unchanged.
On my eight year old Thinkpad with a 802.11n card (that was disassembled from a Mac), ping time to the same router is 0.6ms...faster than a Sandy Bridge with 802.11ac card.
You guys have fast ping...about as fast as my ping over wire if not faster. Does pfSense really make such a difference? Hmm..
Thread starter | Title | Forum | Replies | Date |
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C | Pfsense wins awards | Routers | 34 |
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