An administrator finds that the Microsoft Exchange virtual machines are exhibiting network latency.
What two in-guest changes can help decrease latency? (Choose two.)
A.
LRO
B.
TSO
C.
SR-IOV
D.
RVRDMA
An administrator finds that the Microsoft Exchange virtual machines are exhibiting network latency.
What two in-guest changes can help decrease latency? (Choose two.)
An administrator finds that the Microsoft Exchange virtual machines are exhibiting network latency.
What two in-guest changes can help decrease latency? (Choose two.)
A.
LRO
B.
TSO
C.
SR-IOV
D.
RVRDMA
A,C
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.networking.doc/GUID-ECC80415-442C-44E9-BA7A-852DDB174B9F.html
A, B
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.networking.doc/GUID-D80AEC2F-E0DA-4172-BFFD-B721BF36C2E8.html
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.networking.doc/GUID-ECC80415-442C-44E9-BA7A-852DDB174B9F.html
SR-IOV is not in guest setting
https://www.juniper.net/documentation/en_US/vmx15.1f6/topics/task/configuration/vmx-sriov-enabling-vmware.html
https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=2055140
A, B .. it’s referred to “in-guest changes” , SR-IOV needs capable network cards
A and B are correct
A and B, SRV-io is configured outside guest
Large Receive Offload (LRO)
LRO reassembles incoming network packets into larger buffers and transfers the resulting larger but fewer packets to the network stack of the host or virtual machine. The CPU has to process fewer packets than when LRO is disabled, which reduces its utilization for networking especially in the case of connections that have high bandwidth.
TCP Segmentation Offload (TSO)
TSO on the transmission path of physical network adapters, and VMkernel and virtual machine network adapters improves the performance of ESXi hosts by reducing the overhead of the CPU for TCP/IP network operations. When TSO is enabled, the network adapter divides larger data chunks into TCP segments instead of the CPU. The VMkernel and the guest operating system can use more CPU cycles to run applications.
AB
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.networking.doc/GUID-D80AEC2F-E0DA-4172-BFFD-B721BF36C2E8.html