[zeromq-dev] Measuring Performance Publish & Subscribe
Sta318@web.de
sta318 at web.de
Mon Jul 18 13:51:07 CEST 2016
Hi Aaron,
first thanks for your answer. Yes, that are 11 seconds. I am logging the time for Protobuf, too. There is noticeable measuremt. It has quite constant values.
The subscriber received 1000 messages. After the first message has a duration of 11 seconds, every following message has a duration of 11 seconds. But this is not logical, because the whole measuremt doesn't take 500 * 11 seconds.
Towards this behaviour, i have a general understanding question. As i understand the publish and subscribe pattern is asynchronous. The send method is nonblocking. When there is no speed limitation on sending then the messagequeue gets filled immediately. Is this correct? When it is correct the time that is measured has to look incremented.
I don't understand why i get a constant value for measuring without limitation for sending frequency.
Sry, typing from smartphone. You can delete zeromq-dev Digest, Vol 4, Issue 10
Regards
Sebastian
Am 18. Juli 2016 12:00:01 MESZ, schrieb zeromq-dev-request at lists.zeromq.org:
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> 1. Re: Measuring Performance Publish & Subscribe (Aaron Sokoloski)
>
>
>----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>Message: 1
>Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2016 04:58:58 -0500
>From: Aaron Sokoloski <asokoloski at gmail.com>
>To: ZeroMQ development list <zeromq-dev at lists.zeromq.org>
>Subject: Re: [zeromq-dev] Measuring Performance Publish & Subscribe
>Message-ID:
> <CAAajcW6xxbrYxtoykCx3m6kiHDKZf-dneBpsY6L5UoPfi-=ATw at mail.gmail.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
>Hi Sebastian,
>
>Here are the questions I would ask if I were trying to figure this out:
>
>Those numbers look to be about 11 seconds. Are they correct? When you
>run
>the program and watch the log, do you see it pause for about that much
>time?
>Does it have anything to do with deserialising the large protobuf? If
>you
>skip that step, or avoid protobuf entirely, does the problem disappear?
>Are any messages getting dropped? PUB/SUB can drop messages if the
>receiver can't process them fast enough. If a message got dropped,
>would
>that explain the latency? Are all the messages slow after that first
>slow
>one, or does it go back to being quick?
>
>Cheers,
>Aaron
>
>
>On 17 July 2016 at 03:10, <sta318 at web.de> wrote:
>
>> Hi Team,
>>
>>
>>
>> i am measuring the latency of the publish & suscribe pattern using
>> protobuf. I am using zeromq 4.1.3 on an windows 7 embedded. The
>publisher &
>> subscriber are written in C++.
>>
>>
>>
>> The publisher and the subscriber are on the same system. I wrote two
>> protos which both use. For measuring the latency i am using the
>Windows
>> High Precision Event Timer.
>>
>> In one protobuf object the data is stored. In the other protobuf
>object
>> the systemclocks from the publisher are stored in. On the publisher
>site
>> the system cycles after the start are wrote in the protobuf object.
>The
>> objects are sent in a multipart message. When the subscriber gets the
>> messages, he calculates the difference and gets the latency in
>microseconds.
>>
>>
>>
>> When the payload is maller than 300.12 kB i get logic results. But
>when
>> the payload is 300.12 kB or bigger i get this huge results.
>>
>>
>>
>> Payload (kB) AverageLatency (us)
>>
>> 300.12 7.8928e+06
>>
>> 600.12 5.6801e+06
>>
>> 1200.1 5.3435e+06
>>
>> 3000.1 5.2595e+06
>>
>>
>>
>> When i look directly into the logs i see this behaviour:
>>
>> For a payload of 300.12:
>>
>> MessageNo. Payload (kB) Latency (us)
>>
>> 233 300.125 3961
>>
>> 234 300.125 11131668
>>
>>
>>
>> The same for a Payload of 600.12
>>
>> MessageNo. Payload (kB) Latency (us)
>>
>> 489 0.600125 8799
>>
>> 490 0.600125 11083799
>>
>>
>>
>> The same for a Payload of 1200.13
>>
>> MessageNo. Payload (kB) Latency (us)
>>
>> 548 1.20013 17555
>>
>> 549 1.20013 11082562
>>
>>
>>
>> The same for a Payload of 1200.13
>>
>> MessageNo. Payload (kB) Latency (us)
>>
>> 55 3.00012 45364
>>
>> 56 3.00012 11164985
>>
>>
>>
>> I don’t understand the explosion of the latency. Is there a timeout
>or
>> what happened?
>>
>> What makes ZeroMQ in the background?
>>
>>
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Sebastian
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> zeromq-dev mailing list
>> zeromq-dev at lists.zeromq.org
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>>
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