Schramm, NorbertNorbertSchrammRunge, Torsten M.Torsten M.RungeWolfinger, Bernd E.Bernd E.Wolfinger2019-10-302019-10-302019-03Proceedings of the 2019 International Conference on Networked Systems, NetSys 2019: 8854519 (2019-03)http://hdl.handle.net/11420/3676Traditionally, network functions were often implemented on expensive special networking hardware (e.g. middle-boxes). The architectural concept of network functions virtualization (NFV) enables the implementation of network functions (e.g. routing, firewall) as virtual network functions (VNF) in software to execute them on off-the-shelf x86 hardware. To leverage the capabilities of multi-core processors, the VNFs must be distributed on several cores. However, when many VNFs are executed on different CPU cores, the VNFs compete for the last level cache (LLC) which is a shared resource between all CPU cores and might become a performance bottleneck. With the help of cache partitioning, it is possible to divide the LLC into dedicated blocks for each VNF. This paper investigates if a performance gain can be achieved by cache partitioning. With the help of real testbed measurements, a Linux router as well as a DPDK-based router is examined. Our results show that cache partitioning can be beneficial if the cache partition size is sufficiently large.enCache partitioningDPDKLinuxNFVThe impact of cache partitioning on software-based packet processingConference Paper10.1109/NetSys.2019.8854519Other