A client requested that the MTU limit should be 1492.
Is there a way to do it in the source code (program in C)?
Is there any other way to do it in general? (ifconfig?)
Why does somebody needs to modify MTU to a certain limit? What is the benefit? And the most
important: By changing the MTU is there any risk to break the code?
It's not about speed directly; By increasing MTU you're reducing overhead, which is data that is responsible for the proper delivery of the package but it's not usable by the end user; This can have a increase in speed but only for heavy traffic;
Also, if you increase MTU, you're prone to increase the number of packets that are dropped (since you have a fixed bit error probability and more bits in a packet), eventually causing a decrease in performance with resent packets, etc... So it's a compromise between overhead and data integrity;
I guess that it is more of a interface configuration than something you control with a program; So it's better to stick with 'ifconfig' command or find the equivalent solution for Windows.
Programmaticaly way using C:
int sock = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_IP);
struct ifreq ifr;
strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, "eth0");
if(!ioctl(sock, SIOCGIFMTU, &ifr)) {
ifr.ifr_mtu // Contains current mtu value
}
ifr.ifr_mtu = ... // Change value if it needed
if(!ioctl(sock, SIOCSIFMTU, &ifr)) {
// Mtu changed successfully
}
It works at least on Ubuntu, see man netdevice
.
The MTU is a number which defines the maximum transmission unit per packet. The bigger it is, the faster your data will be sent. Assuming you can send n
packets/s of m
size, if m
grows, m*n
grows too.
I think your client wants that MTU because of its network equipment (maybe ethernet 802.3). Some equipment handel biggest frames size than others.
You can use ifconfig with the option mtu
to change its value: ifconfig eth0 mtu 1492
.