10-22-2014 01:41 PM - edited 03-05-2019 12:01 AM
We often refer to the white paper from Cisco below to decide which type of router to deploy for different situations.
http://www.cisco.com/web/partners/downloads/765/tools/quickreference/routerperformance.pdf
However, at last for me, it's not clear that the numbers on the paper is based on one-way data transmission between port-A and port-B, or bi-directional simultaneous transmit&receive between two full-duplex ports. If the former, should we divide the numbers by 2 when we consider full-duplex performance and choose a router accordingly?
And/or if these kinds of performance tests have some standards, please tell me where to look for them.
Thanks,
Toshi
10-23-2014 01:32 AM
Numbers are given for one way throughput.
It's just pps * 64 * 8.
64 bytes packet is worst case scenario, not realistic (in real life, medium packet size should be around 350 bytes on most networks with mix of traffic close to IMIX). In the other hand, every feature that will be activated on the router will get its pps performance down (QS, ACL, NAT, tunneling).
You should talk to Cisco staff about what's your traffic profile and what feature you want to use. They have scaling tables for the most common features based on internal testing.
10-23-2014 09:33 AM
Thanks for the additional info. It's often unfortunate that we couldn't spec out in detail what it would have or don't have enough time to do when we sell, other than knowing just WAN circuit bandwidth. So we need to have some guide line ourselves including some margin of errors.
10-23-2014 07:39 AM
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When using that document, the performance would be the aggregate for all traffic being forwarded. For symmetrical duplex, dividing by 2 would be correct, but allowing for all the other things a router needs to do, and often does, and leaving some excess capacity, dividing by 4 puts you in the ballpark.
I've attached a Cisco document that better explains real-world performance of many of their ISRs.
10-23-2014 09:26 AM
Thanks a lot for sharing this well-written document. I searched through but couldn't find like this. I'll read through to set our guide line.
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