Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.32985/ijeces.11.2.2
Experimental Evaluation of Desktop Operating Systems Networking Performance
Krešimir Vdovjak
orcid.org/0000-0001-8704-6869
; J. J. Strossmayer University of Osijek, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology
Josip Balen
; J. J. Strossmayer University of Osijek, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology
Krešimir Nenadić
; J. J. Strossmayer University of Osijek, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology
Abstract
The rapid advancement of network, communication and Internet technology resulted with always-on, always-connected, device-independent and remote online working, business, education and entertainment environment. Consequently, users are searching for solutions and technologies that enable fast and reliable wide area network connection and the typical solution is through using personal computers connected with ethernet cable to network equipment and infrastructure that supports gigabit ethernet connection. Besides the complex network infrastructure that can influence performance, the bottleneck can also be caused by insufficient hardware, operating system and software resources on clients’ machines. Therefore, in this paper a networking performance evaluation of three globally most common and most used versions of Windows operating systems; namely Windows 7TM, Windows 8.1TM and Windows 10TM, on two identical computer systems, is conducted. Networking performance measurements are performed with three different benchmarks: namely iPerf, D-ITG and NetStress. Performance evaluation results showed that a newer versions of an operating system bring certain networking performance improvements but by sacrificing other performances.
Keywords
benchmark, network, operating systems, performance evaluation, Windows
Hrčak ID:
242971
URI
Publication date:
19.6.2020.
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