On Wed, May 14, 2025 at 04:33:16PM +0200, Juraj Marcin wrote:
> > if (info->ram) {
> > - monitor_printf(mon, "transferred ram: %" PRIu64 " kbytes\n",
> > - info->ram->transferred >> 10);
> > - monitor_printf(mon, "throughput: %0.2f mbps\n",
> > + monitor_printf(mon, "RAM info:\n");
> > + monitor_printf(mon, " Bandwidth (mbps): %0.2f\n",
> > info->ram->mbps);
>
> I think the previous name (throughput) was better suited for this
> metric. IIUC '->mbps' is the actual amount of data that has been sent
> over a period of time, which is exactly the definition of throughput.
> Bandwidth, on the other hand, is more of a (theoretical) maximum that
> could be sent.
Heh, it's interesting you found this change, I should have mentioned it.
I think I saw more use of the word "bandwidth" from people to describe
miration throughput, but I don't think I was able to distinguish the two
before, after checking I think you're right.
I believe you demostrated solid understanding in networking issues. :-D
I'll use "Throughput" when repost. Thanks!
--
Peter Xu