Hi all, quick 'fun' question. I've got a stock install ProxVE server (version 1.8, kernel version is "2.6.32-4-pve") with a Win7 VM installed (initially with VirtIO Ether and Paravirt HDD controller).
Only issue - I gave it some serious traffic today and note the gig ether nic performance is absolutely terrible. Best I can get is ~1.5Mb/second throughput if I'm lucky.
This is via local gig-ether network, nice bnx nics under the hardware hood of the physical host (dell servers) and I can easily get ~50-75 Mb/sec between my physical servers (ie, proxmox to proxmox direct / linux SCP)
I tried change over to e1000 driver in the hope this might be better, but I have no joy. I've already made one small tune to 'net' cmd line parameters recommended as per proxmox / KVM NIC tuning but to no avail.
Is there any known workaround to get decent performance (gig performance ..) even remotely close to the capacity of the underlying hardware for Win 7 / 2008 VMs on KVM these days ?!
(I note there is a thread sort-of-on-this-topic currently, but the fix appeared to involve using a non-free-to-distribute redhat supported ISO of latest KVM Virtio device driver? - ie not really a fix...)
Thanks,
Tim
Only issue - I gave it some serious traffic today and note the gig ether nic performance is absolutely terrible. Best I can get is ~1.5Mb/second throughput if I'm lucky.
This is via local gig-ether network, nice bnx nics under the hardware hood of the physical host (dell servers) and I can easily get ~50-75 Mb/sec between my physical servers (ie, proxmox to proxmox direct / linux SCP)
I tried change over to e1000 driver in the hope this might be better, but I have no joy. I've already made one small tune to 'net' cmd line parameters recommended as per proxmox / KVM NIC tuning but to no avail.
Is there any known workaround to get decent performance (gig performance ..) even remotely close to the capacity of the underlying hardware for Win 7 / 2008 VMs on KVM these days ?!
(I note there is a thread sort-of-on-this-topic currently, but the fix appeared to involve using a non-free-to-distribute redhat supported ISO of latest KVM Virtio device driver? - ie not really a fix...)
Thanks,
Tim
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