On 3/16/20 3:52 PM, BillZhou wrote:
> One of the reasons to destroy a flow is the fact that no packet matches the
> flow for "timeout" time.
> For example, when TCP\UDP sessions are suddenly closed.
>
> Currently, there is no any dpdk mechanism for flow aging and the
> applications use there own w
On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 6:22 PM BillZhou wrote:
>
> One of the reasons to destroy a flow is the fact that no packet matches the
> flow for "timeout" time.
> For example, when TCP\UDP sessions are suddenly closed.
>
> Currently, there is no any dpdk mechanism for flow aging and the
> applications u
One of the reasons to destroy a flow is the fact that no packet matches the
flow for "timeout" time.
For example, when TCP\UDP sessions are suddenly closed.
Currently, there is no any dpdk mechanism for flow aging and the
applications use there own ways to detect and destroy aged-out flows.
This
One of the reasons to destroy a flow is the fact that no packet matches the
flow for "timeout" time.
For example, when TCP\UDP sessions are suddenly closed.
Currently, there is no any dpdk mechanism for flow aging and the
applications use there own ways to detect and destroy aged-out flows.
This
4 matches
Mail list logo