246 строки
9.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
246 строки
9.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
iperf3 Development
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==================
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The iperf3 project is hosted on GitHub at:
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http://github.com/esnet/iperf
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This site includes the source code repository, issue tracker, and
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wiki.
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Mailing Lists
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-------------
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The developer list for iperf3 is: iperf-dev@googlegroups.com.
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Information on joining the mailing list can be found at:
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http://groups.google.com/group/iperf-dev
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There is, at the moment, no mailing list for user questions, although
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a low volume of inquiries on the developer list is probably
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acceptable. If necessary, a user-oriented mailing list might be
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created in the future.
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Bug Reports
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-----------
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Before submitting a bug report, try checking out the latest version of
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the code, and confirm that it's not already fixed. Then submit to the
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iperf3 issue tracker on GitHub:
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https://github.com/esnet/iperf/issues
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**Note:** Issues submitted to the old iperf3 issue tracker on Google
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Code (or comments to existing issues on the Google Code issue tracker)
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will be ignored.
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Changes from iperf 2.x
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----------------------
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New options (not necessarily complete, please refer to the manual page
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for a complete list of iperf3 options)::
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-V, --verbose more detailed output than before
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-J, --json output in JSON format
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-Z, --zerocopy use a 'zero copy' sendfile() method of sending data
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-O, --omit N omit the first n seconds (to ignore slowstart)
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-T, --title str prefix every output line with this string
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-F, --file name xmit/recv the specified file
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-A, --affinity n/n,m set CPU affinity (Linux and FreeBSD only)
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-k, --blockcount #[KMG] number of blocks (packets) to transmit (instead
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of -t or -n)
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-L, --flowlabel set IPv6 flow label (Linux only)
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Changed flags::
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-C, --linux-congestion set congestion control algorithm (Linux only)
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(-Z in iperf2)
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Deprecated flags (currently no plans to support)::
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-d, --dualtest Do a bidirectional test simultaneously
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-r, --tradeoff Do a bidirectional test individually
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-T, --ttl time-to-live, for multicast (default 1)
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-x, --reportexclude [CDMSV] exclude C(connection) D(data) M(multicast)
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S(settings) V(server) reports
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-y, --reportstyle C report as a Comma-Separated Values
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Also deprecated is the ability to set the options via environment
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variables.
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Known Issues
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------------
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The following problems are notable known issues, which are probably of
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interest to a large fraction of users or have high impact for some
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users, and for which issues have already been filed in the issue
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tracker. These issues are either open (indicating no solution
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currently exists) or closed with the notation that no further attempts
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to solve the problem are currently being made:
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* UDP performance: Some problems have been noticed with iperf3 on the
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ESnet 100G testbed at high UDP rates (above 10Gbps). The symptom is
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that on any particular run of iperf3 the receiver reports a loss
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rate of about 20%, regardless of the ``-b`` option used on the client
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side. This problem appears not to be iperf3-specific, and may be
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due to the placement of the iperf3 process on a CPU and its relation
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to the inbound NIC. In some cases this problem can be mitigated by
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an appropriate use of the CPU affinity (``-A``) option. (Issue #55)
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* Interval reports on high-loss networks: The way iperf3 is currently
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implemented, the sender write command will block until the entire
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block has been written. This means that it might take several
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seconds to send a full block if the network has high loss, and the
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interval reports will have widely varying interval times. A
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solution is being discussed, but in the meantime a work around is to
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try using a small block size, for example ``-l 4K``. (Issue #125,
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a fix will be released in iperf 3.1)
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* The ``-Z`` flag sometimes causes the iperf3 client to hang on OSX.
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(Issue #129)
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* When specifying the TCP buffer size using the ``-w`` flag on Linux,
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the Linux kernel automatically doubles the value passed in to
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compensate for overheads. (This can be observed by using
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iperf3's ``--debug`` flag.) However, CWND does not actually ramp up
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to the doubled value, but only to about 75% of the doubled
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value. Some part of this behavior is documented in the tcp(7)
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manual page. (Issue #145)
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* On some platforms (observed on at least one version of Ubuntu
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Linux), it might be necessary to invoke ``ldconfig`` manually after
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doing a ``make install`` before the ``iperf3`` executable can find
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its shared library. (Issue #153)
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There are, of course, many other open and closed issues in the issue
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tracker.
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Versioning
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----------
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iperf3 version numbers use (roughly) a `Semantic Versioning
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<http://semver.org/>`_ scheme, in which version numbers consist of
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three parts: *MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH*
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The developers increment the:
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* *MAJOR* version when making incompatible API changes,
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* *MINOR* version when adding functionality in a backwards-compatible manner, and
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* *PATCH* version when making backwards-compatible bug fixes.
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Release Engineering Checklist
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-----------------------------
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1. Update the ``README`` and ``RELEASE_NOTES`` files to be accurate. Make sure
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that the "Known Issues" section of the ``README`` file is up to date.
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2. Compose a release announcement. Most of the release announcement
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can be written before tagging. Usually the previous version's
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announcement can be used as a starting point.
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3. Preferably starting from a clean source tree (be sure that ``git
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status`` emits no output), make the changes necessary to produce
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the new version, such as bumping version numbers::
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vi RELEASE_NOTES # update version number and release date
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vi configure.ac # update version parameter in AC_INIT
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vi src/iperf3.1 # update manpage revision date if needed
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vi src/libiperf.3 # update manpage revision date if needed
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git commit -a # commit changes to the local repository only
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./bootstrap.sh # regenerate configure script, etc.
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git commit -a # commit changes to the local repository only
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# Assuming that $VERSION is the version number to be released...
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./make_release tag $VERSION # this creates a tag in the local repo
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./make_release tar $VERSION # create tarball and compute SHA256 hash
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These steps should be done on a platform with a relatively recent
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version of autotools / libtools. Examples are MacOS / MacPorts or
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FreeBSD. The versions of these tools in CentOS 6 are somewhat
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older and probably should be avoided.
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The result will be a release artifact that should be used for
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pre-testing.
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4. Stage the tarball (and a file containing the SHA256 hash) to the
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download site. Currently this is located on ``downloads.es.net``.
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5. From another host, test the link in the release announcement by
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downloading a fresh copy of the file and verifying the SHA256
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checksum. Checking all other links in the release announcement is
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strongly recommended as well.
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6. Also verify (with file(1)) that the tarball is actually a gzipped
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tarball.
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7. For extra points, actually try downloading, compiling, and
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smoke-testing the results of the tarball on all supported
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platforms.
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8. Plug the SHA256 checksum into the release announcement.
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9. PGP-sign the release announcement text using ``gpg --clearsign``.
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The signed announcement will be sent out in a subsequent emails,
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but could also be archived. Decoupling the signing from emailing
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allows a signed release announcement to be resent via email or sent
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by other, non-email means.
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10. At this point, the release can and should be considered
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finalized. To commit the release-engineering-related changes to
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GitHub and make them public, push them out thusly::
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git push # Push version changes
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git push --tags # Push the new tag to the GitHub repo
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11. Send the PGP-signed release announcement to the following
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addresses. Remember to turn off signing in the MUA, if
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applicable. Remember to check the source address when posting to
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lists, as "closed" list will reject posting from all from
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registered email addresses.
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* iperf-dev@googlegroups.com
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* iperf-users@lists.sourceforge.net
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* perfsonar-user@internet2.edu
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* perfsonar-developer@internet2.edu
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Note: Thunderbird sometimes mangles the PGP-signed release
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announcement so that it does not verify correctly. This could be
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due to Thunderbird trying to wrap the length of extremely long
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lines (such as the SHA256 hash). Apple Mail and mutt seem to
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handle this situation correctly. Testing the release announcement
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sending process by sending a copy to oneself first and attempting
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to verify the signature is highly encouraged.
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12. Update the iperf3 Project News section of the documentation site
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to announce the new release (see ``docs/news.rst`` and
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``docs/conf.py`` in the source tree) and deploy a new build of the
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documentation to GitHub Pages.
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13. If an update to the on-line manual page is needed, it can be
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generated with this sequence of commands (tested on CentOS 7) and
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import the result into ``invoking.rst``::
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TERM=
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export TERM
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nroff -Tascii -c -man src/iperf3.1 | ul | sed 's/^/ /' > iperf3.txt
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Code Authors
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------------
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The main authors of iperf3 are (in alphabetical order): Jon Dugan,
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Seth Elliott, Bruce A. Mah, Jeff Poskanzer, Kaustubh Prabhu.
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Additional code contributions have come from (also in alphabetical
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order): Mark Ashley, Aaron Brown, Aeneas Jaißle, Susant Sahani,
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Bruce Simpson, Brian Tierney.
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iperf3 contains some original code from iperf2. The authors of iperf2
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are (in alphabetical order): Jon Dugan, John Estabrook, Jim Ferbuson,
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Andrew Gallatin, Mark Gates, Kevin Gibbs, Stephen Hemminger, Nathan
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Jones, Feng Qin, Gerrit Renker, Ajay Tirumala, Alex Warshavsky.
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