nuttx-apps/examples/tcpblaster
2020-03-31 14:35:57 +08:00
..
.gitignore Revert "Don't generate .depend anymore" 2020-03-22 23:09:40 -05:00
Kconfig Change the defaults of stack size configs to DEFAULT_TASK_STACKSIZE 2020-03-27 02:43:11 -05:00
Make.defs apps/: In all Make.def files, append to CONFIGURED_APPS patch with the absolute path. 2019-10-17 11:33:59 -06:00
Makefile tcpblaster reporting and docs improvements 2020-02-24 20:09:35 -06:00
README.txt tcpblaster reporting and docs improvements 2020-02-24 20:09:35 -06:00
tcpblaster_client.c tcpblaster: Fix build on macOS 2020-03-30 02:12:02 -05:00
tcpblaster_cmdline.c examples/tcpblaster: When a host PC is used, take its implementation of hton/ntoh functions. 2020-03-31 14:35:57 +08:00
tcpblaster_host.c apps/examples/tcpblaster: Fix several problems with the host is the client and the target in the server. Basic problem was that the host did not know the IP address of the target server due to several bugs and build issues that only seemed to affect this configuration. 2019-12-08 17:11:07 -06:00
tcpblaster_netinit.c Squashed commit of the following: 2018-07-05 16:03:54 -06:00
tcpblaster_server.c tcpblaster: Fix build on macOS 2020-03-30 02:12:02 -05:00
tcpblaster_target1.c Unify the void cast usage 2020-01-02 23:21:01 +08:00
tcpblaster_target2.c Application.mk and main.c files: Change builtin's entry point from main to xxx_main by macro expansion. This change make the entry point fully compliant with POSIX/ANSI standard. 2019-10-06 06:14:56 -06:00
tcpblaster.h examples/tcpblaster: When a host PC is used, take its implementation of hton/ntoh functions. 2020-03-31 14:35:57 +08:00

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tcpblaster Performance Test Example
===================================

To set up, do `make menuconfig` and select the Apps > Examples > tcpblaster. By default, nuttx will the be the client
which sends data; and the host computer (Linux, macOS, or Windows) will be the server.

Set up networking so the nuttx computer can ping the host, and the host can ping nuttx. Now you are ready to run the
test.

On host:

    $ ./tcpserver
    Binding to IPv4 Address: 00000000
    server: Accepting connections on port 5471

On nuttx:

    nsh> tcpclient
    Connecting to IPv4 Address: 0100000a
    client: Connected
    [2014-07-31 00:16:15.000] 0: Sent 200 4096-byte buffers:    800.0 KB (avg   4.0 KB) in   0.18 seconds ( 4444.4 KB/second)

Now on the host you should see something like:

    $ ./tcpserver
    Binding to IPv4 Address: 00000000
    server: Accepting connections on port 5471
    server: Connection accepted -- receiving
    [2020-02-22 16:17:07.000] 0: Received 200 buffers:   502.9 KB (buffer average size:   2.5 KB) in   0.12 seconds ( 4194.8 KB/second)
    [2020-02-22 16:17:07.000] 1: Received 200 buffers:   393.1 KB (buffer average size:   2.0 KB) in   0.09 seconds ( 4299.4 KB/second)


This will tell you the link speed in KB/sec  kilobytes per second. If you want kilobits, multiply by 8.

You can use the `make menuconfig` to reverse the setup, and have nuttx be the server, and the host be the client. If you
do that, start the server first (nuttx), then start the client (host).