Hello Gabriel,
On Fri, Jun 07, 2013 at 02:13:18PM -0300, Gabriel Tolón wrote:
This time, I logged just from Equipo 1, to generate less traffic.
I noticed something weird. When I run batctl bw I get this time something like 12 Mbps. If I wait for about 10 seconds and repeat the command, I get something similar, but, if I run the command inmediatly after the bw test finishes, the result improves a lot, here you can see the commands with the seconds between them:
root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:09 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 3064500 Bytes. Throughput: 1.46 MB/s (12.26 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:15 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 3201000 Bytes. Throughput: 1.53 MB/s (12.80 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:18 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 14545500 Bytes. Throughput: 6.94 MB/s (58.18 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:20 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 18729000 Bytes. Throughput: 8.93 MB/s (74.91 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:23 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 21067500 Bytes. Throughput: 10.05 MB/s (84.26 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:26 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 22351500 Bytes. Throughput: 10.66 MB/s (89.40 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:37 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 13281000 Bytes. Throughput: 6.33 MB/s (53.12 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# root@Equipo 1:~# date; batctl bw -t 2000 E3-5GHz Fri Jun 7 16:40:49 UTC 2013 Bandwidth meter called towards 64:70:02:4e:d9:d7 Test over in 2000ms. Sent 3204000 Bytes. Throughput: 1.53 MB/s (12.82 Mbps) root@Equipo 1:~#
Maybe something in the time calculation is wrong?
This strange. The point is that the receiver takes at least 1 second to shutdown the session. Theoretically (and this is what happened during my tests) the receiver should refuse any "second new" connection and the sender should then get 0 throughput. Can I ask you what wifi driver is your device using? Anyway, there must be something wrong in the bw meter given that you see this behaviour only with it and not with iperf.
Did you try a short run over Ethernet? I'm curious to see if the behaviour will be the same.
The logs aretoo heavy for pastebin, so here it's just the part corresponding to the first batctl bw in Equipo1:
Thanks for the log.
I saw something strange:
16:40:09.533172 BAT 64:70:02:4e:d9:43 > E3-5GHz: ICMP BW type MSG (0), id 0, seq 2018499, ttl 50, v 15, length 1510 16:40:09.533392 BAT 64:70:02:4e:d9:43 > E3-5GHz: ICMP BW type MSG (0), id 0, seq 2049999, ttl 50, v 15, length 1510
These are two packets sent one after the other but the second sequence number is not equal to the first + 1500 (payload size)
If you want to watch the whole log I can send you, or paste it in parts.
This gave me already some hints. I'll dig into the code to try to spot what's wrong. But strange that I did not see any problem during my tests..maybe something introduced later by accident.
Thank you so far. I'm still curious about the Ethernet test, then I'll try to upload some more code to test :)
Cheers,