Wireshark-users: Re: [Wireshark-users] use of -z io,stat
From: ronnie sahlberg <ronniesahlberg@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 29 May 2013 14:44:05 -0700
Hi, "I want to calculate how much time the Client spent thinking:" This is actually a very difficult question to answer. Especially since with most clients/most protocols doing multithreaded concurrent i/o "client-slowness" is usually never as simple as delta between a reply and to the next request goes out but much more complex things to model like "slow client does slightly less concurrent i/o" While measuring server performance is pretty straightforward, measuring client performance is often surprisingly hard problem. One method I have found that works surprisingly well (for me) is the LOAD calculation in wireshark. This is a measure of the average queue depth between a client and a server. As the client issues new I/O, the queue grows, as the server completes a request the queue shrinks. This provides a metric to compare the relative speeds between a client and a server and how they are matched/where the bottleneck is. See this for a presentation I did a long time ago that contains a description of LOAD : https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&ved=0CC0QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.snia.org%2Fsites%2Fdefault%2Ffiles2%2Fsdc_archives%2F2008_presentations%2Fmonday%2FRonnieSahlberg_UsingWireshark.pdf&ei=4XWmUc-gAqmqiQKM9oHQCQ&usg=AFQjCNFdiD93MJaGOBkol17t2KcncXEHvw&sig2=xIyIYZTOFoQs2gxKV8p0pA regards ronnie sahlberg On Sun, May 26, 2013 at 8:42 AM, Stuart Kendrick <skendric@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I'm trying to teach myself how to use the '-z io,stat' options in tshark > > I was imagining that the following would tell me how many seconds the trace covers > > tshark -r sample-http.pcapng -o tcp.calculate_timestamps:TRUE -qz "io,stat,0,SUM(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta" > > ============================================= > | IO Statistics | > | | > | Interval size: 11.1 secs (dur) | > | Col 1: Frames and bytes | > | 2: SUM(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta | > |-------------------------------------------| > | |1 |2 | > | Interval | Frames | Bytes | SUM | > |-------------------------------------------| > | 0.0 <> 11.1 | 216 | 45453 | 23.817352 | > ============================================= > > capinfos sample-http.pcapng > File name: sample-http.pcapng > [...] > File size: 53 kB > Data size: 45 kB > Capture duration: 11 seconds > [...] > > But apparently not: '23.817352' does not equal '11 seconds' > > https://vishnu.fhcrc.org/wireshark/sample-http.pcapng > I'm using wireshark 1.10.0rc2 > > What am I not understanding about this '-z io,stat' feature? > > --sk > > Stuart Kendrick > FHCRC > > P.S. > > My actual use case will be more complex than this. This trace was taken next to the Client. > I want to calculate how much time the Client spent thinking: > tshark -r sample-http.pcapng -o tcp.calculate_timestamps:TRUE -qz "io,stat,0,SUM(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta and tcp.dstport==80" > > and how much time the Network + Server spent thinking: > tshark -r sample-http.pcapng -o tcp.calculate_timestamps:TRUE -qz "io,stat,0,SUM(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta and tcp.srcport==80" > > To give myself insights into how much of the total transaction time the Client is contributing versus that of the Network + Server. > > But I figure that if I cannot even persuade tshark to sum every value in the DeltaT column, then I'm not ready to progress to the real-world use case. > > > P.P.S. > The Average function gives me a plausible answer: > > tshark -r sample-http.pcapng -o tcp.calculate_timestamps:TRUE -qz "io,stat,0,AVG(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta" > > ============================================= > | IO Statistics | > | | > | Interval size: 11.1 secs (dur) | > | Col 1: Frames and bytes | > | 2: AVG(tcp.time_delta)tcp.time_delta | > |-------------------------------------------| > | |1 |2 | > | Interval | Frames | Bytes | AVG | > |-------------------------------------------| > | 0.0 <> 11.1 | 473 | 349155 | 0.050354 | > ============================================= > > > But when I sanity-check this calculation using Excel, I see a different result: > 0.023518s > > ___________________________________________________________________________ > Sent via: Wireshark-users mailing list <wireshark-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Archives: http://www.wireshark.org/lists/wireshark-users > Unsubscribe: https://wireshark.org/mailman/options/wireshark-users > mailto:wireshark-users-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe
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