Next: Case Study
Up: Experience with Using CANS
Previous: Experience with Using CANS
All measurements below were taken on a set of Pentium II 450Mhz, 128
MB nodes, running Windows 2000 and connected using 100 Mbps switched
Ethernet.
Figure 6 shows the overheads introduced by
CANS, measured in terms of how they impact communication between an
application and an end service. Each graph shows the round-trip time
and bandwidth achievable for different message sizes for four
configurations: C prog and Java prog refer to our
baselines, corresponding to application and server programs that
communicate directly using native sockets in C or Java respectively.
In process Driver and One EE refer to basic CANS
configurations; the former shows the case when null drivers and a
communication adaptor are embedded into the application interception
layer and indicates the basic overheads of driver composition, and the
latter considers the case where the data path includes null drivers
on an intermediate host between the application and service.
Figure 6 shows that the In process Driver
configuration introduces minimal additional overheads when compared
with the Java prog configuration (less than 10% arising from
extra synchronization and data copying), attesting to the efficiency
of our driver design and composition mechanism. On the other hand, the
One EE configuration does show marked degradation in
performance, primarily because of context switch costs and the fact
that the transmitted data has to traverse across application-level and
network-level four times instead of two times. However, given that
intermediate EEs are intended to be used across different network
domains where other factors dominate latency and bandwidth, this
overhead is unlikely to have much overall impact.
Next: Case Study
Up: Experience with Using CANS
Previous: Experience with Using CANS
Weisong Shi
2001-01-08