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netbench

will put some more stuff here, but some example cmd lines:

Building

Requirements

netbench requires both boost and liburing to be available.

Making

Typically you should run simply to produce ./netbench:

$ make

to build an ASAN version (for development) you can run:

$ make sanitized

which produces netbench.asan.

To use a custom liburing for example you can run:

$ make CXXFLAGS_EXTRA="-I<path_to_liburing>/src/include" LDFLAGS_EXTRA="-L <path_to_liburing>/src/ -l:liburing.a"

To use clang for example you can run $ make CXX=clang++

Running

Single process

You can run netbench in single process mode, and it will connect to itself

run a simple benchmark for io_uring and epoll in one process $ ./netbench

run for 60 seconds epoll only $ ./netbench --rx epoll --time 60

run for io_uring in two parameterisations $ ./netbench --rx "io_uring --provide_buffers 0" --rx "io_uring --provide_buffers 1"

see options for io_uring engine $ ./netbench --rx "io_uring --help"

You can also run it on two machines

prepare an io_uring listener on port 10001 $ ./netbench --server_only 1 --rx io_uring --use_port 10001

prepare an IPv4 io_uring and epoll listener starting on port 10001 epoll will then get port 10002 $ ./netbench --v6 0 --server_only 1 --rx io_uring --rx epoll --use_port 10001

run tests to a prepared host. the host has 2 ports (eg io_uring and epoll) so use both $ ./netbench --tx small --tx burst --client_only 1 --host $(dig +short aaaa foo) --use_port 10001 --use_port 10002

run a test to a IPv4 prepared host $ ./netbench --v6 0 --tx small --tx burst --client_only 1 --use_port 10001 --host $(dig +short a foo)

Note

By default it uses IPv6, in order to use IPv4 set the v6 flag to 0: $ ./netbench --v6 0

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