Document Information
Preface
1. Overview of Solaris System Tuning
2. Solaris Kernel Tunable Parameters
3. NFS Tunable Parameters
4. Internet Protocol Suite Tunable Parameters
Where to Find Tunable Parameter Information
Overview of Tuning IP Suite Parameters
IP Tunable Parameters
UDP Tunable Parameters
IPQoS Tunable Parameter
SCTP Tunable Parameters
Per-Route Metrics
5. Network Cache and Accelerator Tunable Parameters
6. System Facility Parameters
A. Tunable Parameters Change History
B. Revision History for This Manual
Index
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TCP Tunable Parameters
tcp_deferred_ack_interval
- Description
Specifies the time-out value for the TCP-delayed acknowledgment (ACK) timer for hosts that are not directly connected. Refer to RFC 1122, 4.2.3.2.
- Default
100 milliseconds
- Range
1 millisecond to 1 minute
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not increase this value to more than 500 milliseconds. Increase the value under the following circumstances:
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_local_dack_interval
- Description
Specifies the time-out value for TCP-delayed acknowledgment (ACK) timer for hosts that are directly connected. Refer to RFC 1122, 4.2.3.2.
- Default
50 milliseconds
- Range
1 millisecond to 1 minute
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not increase this value to more than 500 milliseconds. Increase the value under the following circumstances:
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_deferred_acks_max
- Description
Specifies the maximum number of TCP segments received from remote destinations (not directly connected) before an acknowledgment (ACK) is generated. TCP segments are measured in units of maximum segment size (MSS) for individual connections. If set to 0 or 1, no ACKs are delayed, assuming all segments are 1 MSS long. The actual number is dynamically calculated for each connection. The value is the default maximum.
- Default
2
- Range
0 to 16
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. In some circumstances, when the network traffic becomes very bursty because of the delayed ACK effect, decrease the value. Do not decrease this value below 2.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_local_dacks_max
- Description
Specifies the maximum number of TCP segments received from directly connected destinations before an acknowledgment (ACK) is generated. TCP segments are measured in units of maximum segment size (MSS) for individual connections. If set to 0 or 1, it means no ACKs are delayed, assuming all segments are 1 MSS long. The actual number is dynamically calculated for each connection. The value is the default maximum.
- Default
8
- Range
0 to 16
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. In some circumstances, when the network traffic becomes very bursty because of the delayed ACK effect, decrease the value. Do not decrease this value below 2.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_wscale_always
- Description
When this parameter is enabled, which is the default setting, TCP always sends a SYN segment with the window scale option, even if the window scale option value is 0. Note that if TCP receives a SYN segment with the window scale option, even if the parameter is disabled, TCP responds with a SYN segment with the window scale option. In addition, the option value is set according to the receive window size. Refer to RFC 1323 for the window scale option.
- Default
1 (enabled)
- Range
0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
If there is an interoperability problem with an old TCP stack that does not support the window scale option, disable this parameter.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
- Change History
For information, see tcp_wscale_always (Solaris 9 Releases).
tcp_tstamp_always
- Description
If set to 1, TCP always sends a SYN segment with the timestamp option. Note that if TCP receives a SYN segment with the timestamp option, TCP responds with a SYN segment with the timestamp option even if the parameter is set to 0.
- Default
0 (disabled)
- Range
0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
If getting an accurate measurement of round-trip time (RTT) and TCP sequence number wraparound is a problem, enable this parameter. Refer to RFC 1323 for more reasons to enable this option.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_xmit_hiwat
- Description
Defines the default send window size in bytes. Refer to Per-Route Metrics for a discussion of setting a different value on a per-route basis. See also tcp_max_buf.
- Default
49,152
- Range
4096 to 1,073,741,824
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
An application can use setsockopt(3XNET) SO_SNDBUF to change the individual connection's send buffer.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_recv_hiwat
- Description
Defines the default receive window size in bytes. Refer to Per-Route Metrics for a discussion of setting a different value on a per-route basis. See also tcp_max_buf and tcp_recv_hiwat_minmss.
- Default
49,152
- Range
2048 to 1,073,741,824
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
An application can use setsockopt(3XNET) SO_RCVBUF to change the individual connection's receive buffer.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_max_buf
- Description
Defines the maximum buffer size in bytes. This parameter controls how large the send and receive buffers are set to by an application that uses setsockopt(3XNET).
- Default
1,048,576
- Range
8192 to 1,073,741,824
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
If TCP connections are being made in a high-speed network environment, increase the value to match the network link speed.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_cwnd_max
- Description
Defines the maximum value of the TCP congestion window (cwnd) in bytes. For more information on the TCP congestion window, refer to RFC 1122 and RFC 2581.
- Default
1,048,576
- Range
128 to 1,073,741,824
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Even if an application uses setsockopt(3XNET) to change the window size to a value higher than tcp_cwnd_max, the actual window used can never grow beyond tcp_cwnd_max. Thus, tcp_max_buf should be greater than tcp_cwnd_max.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_slow_start_initial
- Description
Defines the maximum initial congestion window (cwnd) size in the maximum segment size (MSS) of a TCP connection. Refer to RFC 2414 on how the initial congestion window size is calculated.
- Default
4
- Range
1 to 4
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. If the initial cwnd size causes network congestion under special circumstances, decrease the value.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_slow_start_after_idle
- Description
The congestion window size in the maximum segment size (MSS) of a TCP connection after it has been idled (no segment received) for a period of one retransmission timeout (RTO). Refer to RFC 2414 on how the initial congestion window size is calculated.
- Default
4
- Range
1 to 16,384
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
For more information, see tcp_slow_start_initial.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_sack_permitted
- Description
If set to 2, TCP always sends a SYN segment with the selective acknowledgment (SACK) permitted option. If TCP receives a SYN segment with a SACK-permitted option and this parameter is set to 1, TCP responds with a SACK-permitted option. If the parameter is set to 0, TCP does not send a SACK-permitted option, regardless of whether the incoming segment contains the SACK permitted option. Refer to RFC 2018 for information on the SACK option.
- Default
2 (active enabled)
- Range
0 (disabled), 1 (passive enabled), or 2 (active enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
SACK processing can improve TCP retransmission performance so it should be actively enabled. Sometimes, the other side can be confused with the SACK option actively enabled. If this confusion occurs, set the value to 1 so that SACK processing is enabled only when incoming connections allow SACK processing.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rev_src_routes
- Description
If set to 0, TCP does not reverse the IP source routing option for incoming connections for security reasons. If set to 1, TCP does the normal reverse source routing.
- Default
0 (disabled)
- Range
0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
If IP source routing is needed for diagnostic purposes, enable it.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_time_wait_interval
- Description
Specifies the time in milliseconds that a TCP connection stays in TIME-WAIT state. For more information, refer to RFC 1122, 4.2.2.13.
- Default
60,000 (60 seconds)
- Range
1 second to 10 minutes
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not set the value lower than 60 seconds. For information on changing this parameter, refer to RFC 1122, 4.2.2.13.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_ecn_permitted
- Description
Controls Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) support. If this parameter is set to 0, TCP does not negotiate with a peer that supports the ECN mechanism. If this parameter is set to 1 when initiating a connection, TCP does not tell a peer that it supports ECN mechanism. However, TCP tells a peer that it supports ECN mechanism when accepting a new incoming connection request if the peer indicates that it supports ECN mechanism in the SYN segment. If this parameter is set to 2, in addition to negotiating with a peer on the ECN mechanism when accepting connections, TCP indicates in the outgoing SYN segment that it supports the ECN mechanism when TCP makes active outgoing connections. Refer to RFC 3168 for information on ECN.
- Default
1 (passive enabled)
- Range
0 (disabled), 1 (passive enabled), or 2 (active enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
ECN can help TCP better handle congestion control. However, there are existing TCP implementations, firewalls, NATs, and other network devices that are confused by this mechanism. These devices do not comply to the IETF standard. Because of these devices, the default value of this parameter is set to 1. In rare cases, passive enabling can still cause problems. Set the parameter to 0 only if absolutely necessary.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_conn_req_max_q
- Description
Specifies the default maximum number of pending TCP connections for a TCP listener waiting to be accepted by accept(3SOCKET). See also tcp_conn_req_max_q0.
- Default
128
- Range
1 to 4,294,967,296
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
For applications such as web servers that might receive several connection requests, the default value might be increased to match the incoming rate. Do not increase the parameter to a very large value. The pending TCP connections can consume excessive memory. Also, if an application cannot handle that many connection requests fast enough because the number of pending TCP connections is too large, new incoming requests might be denied. Note that increasing tcp_conn_req_max_q does not mean that applications can have that many pending TCP connections. Applications can use listen(3SOCKET) to change the maximum number of pending TCP connections for each socket. This parameter is the maximum an application can use listen() to set the number to. Thus, even if this parameter is set to a very large value, the actual maximum number for a socket might be much less than tcp_conn_req_max_q, depending on the value used in listen().
- Commitment Level
Unstable
- Change History
For information, see xxx:ip_forwarding (Solaris 9 Releases).
tcp_conn_req_max_q0
- Description
Specifies the default maximum number of incomplete (three-way handshake not yet finished) pending TCP connections for a TCP listener. For more information on TCP three-way handshake, refer to RFC 793. See also tcp_conn_req_max_q.
- Default
1024
- Range
0 to 4,294,967,296
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
For applications such as web servers that might receive excessive connection requests, you can increase the default value to match the incoming rate. The following explains the relationship between tcp_conn_req_max_q0 and the maximum number of pending connections for each socket. When a connection request is received, TCP first checks if the number of pending TCP connections (three-way handshake is done) waiting to be accepted exceeds the maximum (N) for the listener. If the connections are excessive, the request is denied. If the number of connections is allowable, then TCP checks if the number of incomplete pending TCP connections exceeds the sum of N and tcp_conn_req_max_q0. If it does not, the request is accepted. Otherwise, the oldest incomplete pending TCP request is dropped.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
- Change History
For information, see xxx:ip_forwarding (Solaris 9 Releases).
tcp_conn_req_min
- Description
Specifies the default minimum value for the maximum number of pending TCP connection requests for a listener waiting to be accepted. This is the lowest maximum value of listen(3SOCKET) that an application can use.
- Default
1
- Range
1 to 1024
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
This parameter can be a solution for applications that use listen(3SOCKET) to set the maximum number of pending TCP connections to a value too low. Increase the value to match the incoming connection request rate.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rst_sent_rate_enabled
- Description
If this parameter is set to 1, the maximum rate of sending a RST segment is controlled by the ndd parameter, tcp_rst_sent_rate. If this parameter is set to 0, no rate control when sending a RST segment is available.
- Default
1 (enabled)
- Range
0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
This tunable helps defend against denial of service attacks on TCP by limiting the rate by which a RST segment is sent out. The only time this rate control should be disabled is when strict conformance to RFC 793 is required.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rst_sent_rate
- Description
Sets the maximum number of RST segments that TCP can send out per second.
- Default
40
- Range
0 to 4,294,967,296
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
In a TCP environment, there might be a legitimate reason to generate more RSTs than the default value allows. In this case, increase the default value of this parameter.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_mdt_max_pbufs
- Description
Specifies the number of payload buffers that can be carried by a single M_MULTIDATA message that is generated by TCP. See also ip_multidata_outbound.
- Default
16
- Range
1 to 16
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Decreasing this parameter might aid in debugging device driver development by limiting the amount of payload buffers per M_MULTIDATA message that is generated by TCP.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_keepalive_interval
- Description
This ndd parameter sets a probe interval that is first sent out after a TCP connection is idle on a system-wide basis. Solaris supports the TCP keep-alive mechanism as described in RFC 1122. This mechanism is enabled by setting the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option on a TCP socket. If SO_KEEPALIVE is enabled for a socket, the first keep-alive probe is sent out after a TCP connection is idle for two hours, the default value of the tcp_keepalive_interval parameter. If the peer does not respond to the probe after eight minutes, the TCP connection is aborted. For more information, refer to tcp_keepalive_abort_interval. You can also use the TCP_KEEPALIVE_THRESHOLD socket option on individual applications to override the default interval so that each application can have its own interval on each socket. The option value is an unsigned integer in milliseconds. See also tcp(7P).
- Default
2 hours
- Range
10 seconds to 10 days
- Units
Unsigned integer (milliseconds)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. If under special circumstances, the first keepalive probe needs to be sent earlier than two hours, use the TCP_KEEPALIVE_THRESHOLD socket option to reduce the interval on an individual application.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_keepalive_abort_interval
- Description
This ndd parameter sets a default time threshold to abort a TCP connection after the keepalive probing mechanism has failed. This abort time threshold can also be changed on a per socket basis by using the TCP_KEEPALIVE_ABORT_THRESHOLD option on a TCP socket. The option value is an unsigned integer in milliseconds. If an application has the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option enabled, it can then use the TCP_KEEPALIVE_THRESHOLD socket option to change the initial probe interval and TCP_KEEPALIVE_ABORT_THRESHOLD socket option to change the abort interval. A value of zero means that TCP should never time out and abort the connection when probing. See also tcp_keepalive_interval.
- Default
8 minutes
- Range
0 to 8 minutes
- Units
Unsigned integer (milliseconds)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. If under special circumstances, a TCP connection needs to be aborted earlier than the default eight minutes of the keepalive probing, use the TCP_KEEPALIVE_ABORT_THRESHOLD socket option to reduce the abort interval on an individual application.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
TCP/IP Parameters Set in the /etc/system File
The following parameters can be set only in the /etc/system file. After the
file is modified, reboot the system. For example, the following entry sets the ipcl_conn_hash_size parameter: set ip:ipcl_conn_hash_sizes=value
ipcl_conn_hash_size
- Description
Controls the size of the connection hash table used by IP. The default value of 0 means that the system automatically sizes an appropriate value for this parameter at boot time, depending on the available memory.
- Data Type
Unsigned integer
- Default
0
- Range
0 to 82,500
- Dynamic?
No. The parameter can only be changed at boot time.
- When to Change
If the system consistently has tens of thousands of TCP connections, the value can be increased accordingly. Increasing the hash table size means that more memory is wired down, thereby reducing available memory to user applications.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
ip_squeue_worker_wait
- Description
Governs the maximum delay in waking up a worker thread to process TCP/IP packets that are enqueued on an squeue. An squeue is a serialization queue that is used by the TCP/IP kernel code to process TCP/IP packets.
- Default
10 milliseconds
- Range
0 – 50 milliseconds
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Consider tuning this parameter if latency is an issue, and network traffic is light. For example, if the machine serves mostly interactive network traffic. The default value usually works best on a network file server, a web server, or any server that has substantial network traffic.
- Zone Configuration
This parameter can only be set in the global zone.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
- Change History
For information, see ip_squeue_worker_wait (Solaris 10 11/06 Release).
TCP Parameters With Additional Cautions
Changing the following parameters is not recommended.
tcp_ip_abort_interval
- Description
Specifies the default total retransmission timeout value for a TCP connection. For a given TCP connection, if TCP has been retransmitting for tcp_ip_abort_interval period of time and it has not received any acknowledgment from the other endpoint during this period, TCP closes this connection. For TCP retransmission timeout (RTO) calculation, refer to RFC 1122, 4.2.3. See also tcp_rexmit_interval_max.
- Default
8 minutes
- Range
500 milliseconds to 1193 hours
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change this value. See tcp_rexmit_interval_max for exceptions.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rexmit_interval_initial
- Description
Specifies the default initial retransmission timeout (RTO) value for a TCP connection. Refer to Per-Route Metrics for a discussion of setting a different value on a per-route basis.
- Default
3 seconds
- Range
1 millisecond to 20 seconds
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change this value. Lowering the value can result in unnecessary retransmissions.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rexmit_interval_max
- Description
Defines the default maximum retransmission timeout value (RTO). The calculated RTO for all TCP connections cannot exceed this value. See also tcp_ip_abort_interval.
- Default
60 seconds
- Range
1 millisecond to 2 hours
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value in a normal network environment. If, in some special circumstances, the round-trip time (RTT) for a connection is about 10 seconds, you can increase this value. If you change this value, you should also change the tcp_ip_abort_interval parameter. Change the value of tcp_ip_abort_interval to at least four times the value of tcp_rexmit_interval_max.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rexmit_interval_min
- Description
Specifies the default minimum retransmission time out (RTO) value. The calculated RTO for all TCP connections cannot be lower than this value. See also tcp_rexmit_interval_max.
- Default
400 milliseconds
- Range
1 millisecond to 20 seconds
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value in a normal network environment. TCP's RTO calculation should cope with most RTT fluctuations. If, in some very special circumstances, the round-trip time (RTT) for a connection is about 10 seconds, increase this value. If you change this value, you should change the tcp_rexmit_interval_max parameter. Change the value of tcp_rexmit_interval_max to at least eight times the value of tcp_rexmit_interval_min.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_rexmit_interval_extra
- Description
Specifies a constant added to the calculated retransmission time out value (RTO).
- Default
0 milliseconds
- Range
0 to 2 hours
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. When the RTO calculation fails to obtain a good value for a connection, you can change this value to avoid unnecessary retransmissions.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_tstamp_if_wscale
- Description
If this parameter is set to 1, and the window scale option is enabled for a connection, TCP also enables the timestamp option for that connection.
- Default
1 (enabled)
- Range
0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled)
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change this value. In general, when TCP is used in high-speed network, protection against sequence number wraparound is essential. Thus, you need the timestamp option.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
tcp_recv_hiwat_minmss
- Description
Controls the default minimum receive window size. The minimum is tcp_recv_hiwat_minmss times the size of maximum segment size (MSS) of a connection.
- Default
4
- Range
1 to 65,536
- Dynamic?
Yes
- When to Change
Do not change the value. If changing it is necessary, do not change the value lower than 4.
- Commitment Level
Unstable
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