At Fri, 29 Jan 2010 14:43:38 -0600, David Young <dyoung%pobox.com@localhost> wrote: Subject: Re: kernel level multilink PPP and maybe (re)porting FreeBSD netgraph > > On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 02:56:31PM -0500, Greg A. Woods wrote: > > I need advanced kernel-level multilink PPP (MLPPP) support, including > > the ability to create bundle links via UDP (and maybe TCP) over IP. > > Why do you need "kernel-level multilink PPP" support? Do you need to > interoperate with existing multilink PPP systems? Partly, but the biggest concern is performance. I.e.: 1. We absolutely do need to use MLPPP. We do control both ends of the connection, and we may someday look at other protocols, but our current production head-end concentrators are using MLPPP. 2. We also need to do it over multiple connections that are up to many tens of megabits/sec each, perhaps sometimes even 100mbps each. Home cable connections are now 10-50mbps down or more in many places, and truly high-speed ADSL2 is also growing in availability. We aggregate such connections for both speed and reliability reasons. Our current low-end FreeBSD-based CPE device, which has a board with a 500 MHz AMD Geode LX800 on it, when connected to a 50mbps+2mbps cable connection that has been split into two tunnels, can achieve 8-mbps max (download) with userland MLPPP, period; but as much as 34mbps with MPD using Netgraph MLPPP via UDP, and that was just a quick&dirty test without tuning anything or using truly independent connections. As I'm sure you know it's just not feasible to move data fast enough in and out of userland to split and reassemble packets them on commodity CPE devices. We also need to do ipsec (with hardware crypto), ipfilter, ethernet bridging and vlans, etc., all on the same little processors. -- Greg A. Woods Planix, Inc. <woods%planix.com@localhost> +1 416 218 0099 http://www.planix.com/
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