The test data on article is about server setup which is the right use case for this change.
Moreover the L3 cache on CPU is what makes significant difference, IMO.
If that is true, not sure how much improvement consumer-grade desktop will see, given that most consumer-grade CPU will not have that much L3 cache on chip.
This effort has been around optimizing cacheline consumption and adding safeguards to ensure future changes don't regress.
In turn this optimizing of core networking structures is causing TCP performance with many concurrent connections to increase by as much as 40% or more!
This patch series attempts to reorganize the core networking stack variables to minimize cacheline consumption during the phase of data transfer.
Meanwhile new Ethernet driver hardware support in Linux 6.8 includes the Octeon CN10K devices, Broadcom 5760X P7, Qualcomm SM8550 SoC, and Texas Instrument DP83TG720S PHY.
NVIDIA Mellanox Ethernet data center switches can also now enjoy firmware updates without a reboot.
The full list of new networking patches for the Linux 6.8 kernel merge window can be found via today's pull request.
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