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<p dir="ltr">On Nov 25, 2016 5:22 AM, "<a href="mailto:qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn">qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn</a>" <<a href="mailto:qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn">qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn</a>> wrote:<br>
>><br>
>> Yes, I have got 9.5Gbits/s in the vm. <br>
>> I found that when I copy a file using scp command I got 275Mb/s(limited by the disks). But in the admin portal I saw a 100% network(It should be about 30%), so the engine regarded the virtual nic as a 1G nic.<br>
>> I also found that the vm qos could only limit 1024Mbps.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Both sound like issues we should improve. Not even sure how to handle the first one of course. <br>
Y. </p>
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>> On Thu, Nov 24, 2016 at 10:24 AM, <a href="mailto:qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn">qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn</a> <<a href="mailto:qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn">qinglong.dong@horebdata.cn</a>> wrote:<br>
>>><br>
>>> Hi, all:<br>
>>> I have an ovirt 4.0.5 environment. There is a 10g nic in the host. I have created a vm which uses the 10g nic. The type of the nic is virtio. Then I got a 1g virtual nic in the vm. Now I want a 10g virtual nic in the vm. Is it possible? Anyone can help? Thanks!<br>
>><br>
>><br>
>> Disregard this number - it's a virtual NIC, the number is virtual as well. Back in the days when virtio was created it seemed like a good fast number to go with. They could have gone with any speed.<br>
>> Please test the real performance and let us know what you've got.<br>
>> Y.<br>
>> <br>
>>><br>
>>><br>
>>><br>
>>><br>
>>><br>
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>>><br>
>></p>