(05-01-2020, 09:01 PM)kuleszdl Wrote: I now added the two patches discussed in this thread (the hack from the lkml and the PCIe gen2 enablement) and added the tg3 driver, then built a custom OpenWRT image. Very good news: It boots up fine!
Then I have setup a small testbed with four Lenovo Thinkpad X200(s) machines (all with an Intel NIC) and ran a couple of benchmarks and power measures (using a simple wall meter):
Code:| 0-Links | 1-Link | 2-Links | 3-Links | 4-Links
--------------------------------------------------------
Idle | 5.3 W | 5.8 W | 6.5 W | 7.3 W | 8.1 W
Load | - | 6.4 W | 7.6 W | 8.6 W | 9.4 W
Speed | - | 940 | 930 | 890 | 630
(Mbit/s)
The limiting factor in terms of speed seems to be the NIC or maybe thermals (mine lacks a cooler). The CPU load with 4 iperf3-tests running was still at around 30%, so lots of CPU cycles left on the rockpro64 side. Interesting note: When the speed dropped, it dropped on all four machines to the same level.
During the tests, the rockpro64 itself was very stable (no crashes or errors in dmesg).
Here are two pictures illustrating the setup:
@tllim Firewall-case welcome! Apart from a let's say smaller version of the NAS case I was also thinking about a tall case where the NIC is placed using a PCIe riser card.
As a next step I plan to put the rockpro64 in the NAS case and replace my existing router to see how stable the whole thing runs in a more realistic 24/7-setting. Another goal is to replace the proprietary firmware on the NICs by the free alternative I mentioned earlier in this thread.
Hmmm, both 3 and 4 are pegged at roughly 2500 Mbps.
This matches up how much I've been able to get out of my 10Gig card, but I don't have the hardware to saturate it.
I wonder if the 2.5G is the maximum throughput of PCIe controller, which would be pretty disappointing.
Edit:
Never mind, I've plugged everything I have into the 10gig switch directly, and I'm able to get over 3Gbps in client mode.
It would seem the rk3399 doesn't have the power to generate more than that with iperf3 in server mode.
Also, people have seen 800MBps on SSDs, which is more than double this.
I'll need to test again though once I get a full 10gig trunk going.
BTW, here's my setup:
Cisco 2960s
x520 Dual Port Intel
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