Small Mosaic


Categories:

/books
/career
/cloud
/codinghorrors
/events
/geekstuff
/justdont
/languages
/languages/bash
/linkshot
/magazines
/meta
/misctech
/movies
/nottech
/operatingsystems
/operatingsystems/linux
/operatingsystems/linux/debian
/operatingsystems/solaris
/perl
/presentations
/programming
/python
/ruby
/security
/security/apache
/security/tools
/serversmells
/services
/services/dns
/sites
/specifications
/sysadmin
/testing
/tools
/tools/commandline
/tools/firefox
/tools/gui
/tools/network
/tools/online
/tools/online/greasemonkey
/tools/puppet
/unixdaemon

Archives:

May 20131
April 20131
March 20131
February 20133
January 20135
July 20111
June 20112
May 20113
April 20112
March 20117
January 20111
Full Archives

Sun, 05 Dec 2004

Gigabit Ethernet? Bah! I need REAL speed!
Although it actually sounds pretty fast, when you actually start benchmarking it, Gigabit Ethernet isn't quite as good a solution as you'd think. As more and more commercial deployments move to using SANs and NAS for online storage and backups it's increasingly easy to saturate existing LANs.

One possible solution as people start to look at 10 and 100Gbps networks is FireEngine (PDF), a set of architecture changes and improvements for Solaris 10. The white-paper linked to above provides a nice overview on what they've changed and some estimated (almost all benchmarks are lies ;)) performance improvements; all I need now are a couple of 10Gbps NICs!

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2004/12/05 16:13 | /operatingsystems/solaris | Permanent link to this entry | This entry and same date


books career cloud codinghorrors events geekstuff justdont magazines meta misctech movies nottech operatingsystems/linux operatingsystems/linux/debian operatingsystems/solaris perl programming python ruby security security/tools serversmells services/dns sites sysadmin testing tools tools/commandline tools/firefox tools/gui tools/network tools/online tools/online/greasemonkey tools/puppet unixdaemon

Copyright © 2000-2010 Dean Wilson XML feed logo