IPERF3(1) manual page
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iperf3 - perform network throughput tests
iperf3 -s [ options
]
iperf3 -c server [ options ]
iperf3 is a tool for performing
network throughput measurements. It can test TCP, UDP, or SCTP throughput.
To perform an iperf3 test the user must establish both a server and a client.
The iperf3 executable contains both client and server functionality. An
iperf3 server can be started using either of the -s or --server command-line
parameters, for example:
- iperf3 -s
- iperf3 --server
Note that many iperf3
parameters have both short (-s) and long (--server) forms. In this section
we will generally use the short form of command-line flags, unless only
the long form of a flag is available.
By default, the iperf3 server listens
on TCP port 5201 for connections from an iperf3 client. A custom port can
be specified by using the -p flag, for example:
- iperf3 -s -p 5002
After the
server is started, it will listen for connections from iperf3 clients (in
other words, the iperf3 program run in client mode). The client mode can
be started using the -c command-line option, which also requires a host to
which iperf3 should connect. The host can by specified by hostname, IPv4
literal, or IPv6 literal:
- iperf3 -c iperf3.example.com
- iperf3 -c 192.0.2.1
- iperf3
-c 2001:db8::1
If the iperf3 server is running on a non-default TCP port,
that port number needs to be specified on the client as well:
- iperf3 -c
iperf3.example.com -p 5002
The initial TCP connection is used to exchange
test parameters, control the start and end of the test, and to exchange
test results. This is sometimes referred to as the "control connection".
The actual test data is sent over a separate TCP connection, as a separate
flow of UDP packets, or as an independent SCTP connection, depending on
what protocol was specified by the client.
Normally, the test data is sent
from the client to the server, and measures the upload speed of the client.
Measuring the download speed from the server can be done by specifying
the -R flag on the client. This causes data to be sent from the server to
the client.
- iperf3 -c iperf3.example.com -p 5202 -R
Results are displayed on
both the client and server. There will be at least one line of output per
measurement interval (by default a measurement interval lasts for one second,
but this can be changed by the -i option). Each line of output includes (at
least) the time since the start of the test, amount of data transfered
during the interval, and the average bitrate over that interval. Note that
the values for each measurement interval are taken from the point of view
of the endpoint process emitting that output (in other words, the output
on the client shows the measurement interval data for the client.
At the
end of the test is a set of statistics that shows (at least as much as
possible) a summary of the test as seen by both the sender and the receiver,
with lines tagged accordingly. Recall that by default the client is the
sender and the server is the receiver, although as indicated above, use
of the -R flag will reverse these roles.
The client can be made to retrieve
the server-side output for a given test by specifying the --get-server-output
flag.
Either the client or the server can produce its output in a JSON structure,
useful for integration with other programs, by passing it the -J flag. Because
the contents of the JSON structure are only competely known after the test
has finished, no JSON output will be emitted until the end of the test.
iperf3 has a (overly) large set of command-line options that can be used
to set the parameters of a test. They are given in the "GENERAL OPTIONS"
section of the manual page below, as well as summarized in iperf3’s help
output, which can be viewed by running iperf3 with the -h flag.
- -p,
--port n
- set server port to listen on/connect to to n (default 5201)
- -f, --format
- [kmgtKMGT] format to report: Kbits/Mbits/Gbits/Tbits
- -i, --interval n
- pause
n seconds between periodic throughput reports; default is 1, use 0 to disable
- -F, --file name
- Use a file as the source (on the sender) or sink (on the receiver)
of data, rather than just generating random data or throwing it away. This
feature is used for finding whether or not the storage subsystem is the
bottleneck for file transfers. It does not turn iperf3 into a file transfer
tool. The length, attributes, and in some cases contents of the received
file may not match those of the original file.
- -A, --affinity n/n,m
- Set the
CPU affinity, if possible (Linux and FreeBSD only). On both the client and
server you can set the local affinity by using the n form of this argument
(where n is a CPU number). In addition, on the client side you can override
the server’s affinity for just that one test, using the n,m form of argument.
Note that when using this feature, a process will only be bound to a single
CPU (as opposed to a set containing potentialy multiple CPUs).
- -B, --bind host
- bind to a specific interface. If the host has multiple interfaces, it will
use the first interface by default.
- -V, --verbose
- give more detailed output
- -J, --json
- output in JSON format
- --logfile file
- send output to a log file.
- --forceflush
- force flushing output at every interval. Used to avoid buffering
when sending output to pipe.
- -d, --debug
- emit debugging output. Primarily (perhaps
exclusively) of use to developers.
- -v, --version
- show version information
and quit
- -h, --help
- show a help synopsis
- -s, --server
- run in server mode
- -D, --daemon
- run the server in background as a daemon
- -I, --pidfile file
- write a file with the process ID, most useful when running
as a daemon.
- -1, --one-off
- handle one client connection, then exit.
- --rsa-private-key-path
file
- path to the RSA private key (not password-protected) used to decrypt
authentication credentials from the client (if built with OpenSSL support).
- --authorized-users-path file
- path to the configuration file containing authorized
users credentials to run iperf tests (if built with OpenSSL support). The
file is a comma separated list of usernames and password hashes; more information
on the structure of the file can be found in the EXAMPLES section.
- -c, --client host
- run in client mode, connecting to the specified
server. By default, a test consists of sending data from the client to the
server, unless the -R flag is specified.
- --sctp
- use SCTP rather than TCP (FreeBSD
and Linux)
- -u, --udp
- use UDP rather than TCP
- --connect-timeout n
- set timeout
for establishing the initial control connection to the server, in milliseconds.
The default behavior is the operating system’s timeout for TCP connection
establishment. Providing a shorter value may speed up detection of a down
iperf3 server.
- -b, --bitrate n[KM]
- set target bitrate to n bits/sec (default
1 Mbit/sec for UDP, unlimited for TCP/SCTP). If there are multiple streams
(-P flag), the throughput limit is applied separately to each stream. You
can also add a ’/’ and a number to the bitrate specifier. This is called "burst
mode". It will send the given number of packets without pausing, even if
that temporarily exceeds the specified throughput limit. Setting the target
bitrate to 0 will disable bitrate limits (particularly useful for UDP tests).
This throughput limit is implemented internally inside iperf3, and is available
on all platforms. Compare with the --fq-rate flag. This option replaces the
--bandwidth flag, which is now deprecated but (at least for now) still accepted.
- --pacing-timer n[KMG]
- set pacing timer interval in microseconds (default 1000
microseconds, or 1 ms). This controls iperf3’s internal pacing timer for
the -b/--bitrate option. The timer fires at the interval set by this parameter.
Smaller values of the pacing timer parameter smooth out the traffic emitted
by iperf3, but potentially at the cost of performance due to more frequent
timer processing.
- --fq-rate n[KM]
- Set a rate to be used with fair-queueing based
socket-level pacing, in bits per second. This pacing (if specified) will
be in addition to any pacing due to iperf3’s internal throughput pacing
(-b/--bitrate flag), and both can be specified for the same test. Only available
on platforms supporting the SO_MAX_PACING_RATE socket option (currently
only Linux). The default is no fair-queueing based pacing.
- --no-fq-socket-pacing
- This option is deprecated and will be removed. It is equivalent to specifying
--fq-rate=0.
- -t, --time n
- time in seconds to transmit for (default 10 secs)
- -n,
--bytes n[KM]
- number of bytes to transmit (instead of -t)
- -k, --blockcount n[KM]
- number of blocks (packets) to transmit (instead of -t or -n)
- -l, --length n[KM]
- length of buffer to read or write. For TCP tests, the default value is
128KB. In the case of UDP, iperf3 tries to dynamically determine a reasonable
sending size based on the path MTU; if that cannot be determined it uses
1460 bytes as a sending size. For SCTP tests, the default size is 64KB.
- --cport
port
- bind data streams to a specific client port (for TCP and UDP only,
default is to use an ephemeral port)
- -P, --parallel n
- number of parallel client
streams to run. Note that iperf3 is single threaded, so if you are CPU bound,
this will not yield higher throughput.
- -R, --reverse
- reverse the direction
of a test, so that the server sends data to the client
- -w, --window n[KM]
- window size / socket buffer size (this gets sent to the server and used
on that side too)
- -M, --set-mss n
- set TCP/SCTP maximum segment size (MTU - 40
bytes)
- -N, --no-delay
- set TCP/SCTP no delay, disabling Nagle’s Algorithm
- -4,
--version4
- only use IPv4
- -6, --version6
- only use IPv6
- -S, --tos n
- set the IP
type of service
- --dscp dscp
- set the IP DSCP bits. Both numeric and symbolic
values are accepted.
- -L, --flowlabel n
- set the IPv6 flow label (currently only
supported on Linux)
- -X, --xbind name
- Bind SCTP associations to a specific
subset of links using sctp_bindx(3)
. The --B flag will be ignored if this
flag is specified. Normally SCTP will include the protocol addresses of
all active links on the local host when setting up an association. Specifying
at least one --X name will disable this behaviour. This flag must be specified
for each link to be included in the association, and is supported for both
iperf servers and clients (the latter are supported by passing the first
--X argument to bind(2)
). Hostnames are accepted as arguments and are resolved
using getaddrinfo(3)
. If the --4 or --6 flags are specified, names which do
not resolve to addresses within the specified protocol family will be ignored.
- --nstreams n
- Set number of SCTP streams.
- -Z, --zerocopy
- Use a "zero copy" method
of sending data, such as sendfile(2)
, instead of the usual write(2)
.
- -O,
--omit n
- Omit the first n seconds of the test, to skip past the TCP slow-start
period.
- -T, --title str
- Prefix every output line with this string.
- -C, --congestion
algo
- Set the congestion control algorithm (Linux and FreeBSD only). An
older --linux-congestion synonym for this flag is accepted but is deprecated.
- --get-server-output
- Get the output from the server. The output format is determined
by the server (in particular, if the server was invoked with the --json flag,
the output will be in JSON format, otherwise it will be in human-readable
format). If the client is run with --json, the server output is included in
a JSON object; otherwise it is appended at the bottom of the human-readable
output.
- --username username
- username to use for authentication to the iperf
server (if built with OpenSSL support). The password will be prompted for
interactively when the test is run.
- --rsa-public-key-path file
- path to the RSA
public key used to encrypt authentication credentials (if built with OpenSSL
support)
The authentication feature
of requires an RSA public keypair. The public key is used to encrypt the
authentication token containing the user credentials, while the private
key is used to decrypt the authentication token. An example of a set of
UNIX/Linux commands to generate correct keypair follows:
> openssl genrsa
-des3 -out private.pem 2048
> openssl rsa -in private.pem -outform PEM -pubout
-out public.pem
> openssl rsa -in private.pem -out private_not_protected.pem -outform
PEM
After these commands, the public key will be contained in the file
public.pem and the private key will be contained in the file private_not_protected.pem.
A simple plaintext file
must be provided to the iperf3 server in order to specify the authorized
user credentials. The file is a simple list of comma-separated pairs of a
username and a corresponding password hash. The password hash is a SHA256
hash of the string "{$user}$password". The file can also contain commented
lines (starting with the # character). An example of commands to generate
the password hash on a UNIX/Linux system is given below:
> S_USER=mario
S_PASSWD=rossi
> echo -n "{$S_USER}$S_PASSWD" | sha256sum | awk ’{ print $1
}’
An example of a password file (with an entry corresponding to the above
username and password) is given below:
> cat credentials.csv
# file format:
username,sha256
mario,bf7a49a846d44b454a5d11e7acfaf13d138bbe0b7483aa3e050879700572709b
A list of the contributors to iperf3 can be found within the documentation
located at http://software.es.net/iperf/dev.html#authors.
libiperf(3)
,
http://software.es.net/iperf
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