I am interested in your ways to identify a bottleneck within a network.
In my case, I've got 2 locations, one in UK, one in Germany. Hardware is Fortigates for FW/routing and switches are Cisco/HPE. Locations are connected through an Ipsec VPN over the internet and all internet connections have at least a bandwidth of 100 Mbps.
The problem occurs as soon as one client in UK tries to download data via SSH from a server in Germany. The max download speed is 10 Mbps and for the duration of the download the whole location in UK has problems accessing resources through the VPN in Germany (Citrix, Exchange, Sharepoint, etc).
I've changed some information for privacy reasons but I'd be interested in your first steps on how to tackle such a problem. Do you have some kind of runbook that you follow? What are common errors that your encounter?
(independently from my case too, just in general)
EDIT: Current list
packet capture on client and server to check for packet loss, latency, etc. - if packets dropped, check intermediate devices
check utilization of intermediate devices (CPU, RAM, etc)
check throughput with different tools (ipfer3, nc, etc) and protocols (TCP, UDP, etc) and compare
check if traffic shaper/ QoS are in place
check ports intermediate devices for port speed mismatch
MTU/MSS mismatch
is the internet connection affected too, or just traffic through the VPN
Ipsec configuration
turn off security function of FW temporary and check if it is still reproducible
traceroute from A to B, any latency spikes?
check RTT, RWND, MSS/MTU, TTL via pcap, on the transferring client itself and reference client, without and while an active data transfer
Prob not related but noteworthy:
check I/O of server and client
I'll keep this list updated and appreciate further tips.
Update
I had to postpone the session and will do the stress test on Monday or Tuesday evening. I'll update you as soon as I have the results.
Update2
So, I'll try to keep it short.
First iperf3 over TCP run (UK < DE) with same FW rules let me reproduce the problem. Max speed 10 Mbps, and DE < UK even slower, down to 1-2 Mbps. Pattern of the test implies an unreliable connection (short up to 30 Mbts, then 0, and so on). Traceroute shows same hops in both directions, no latency spikes, all good.
BUT ICMP and iperf3 over UDP runs show a packet loss of min 10% and up to 30% in both directions!
Multiple speed tests to endpoints over the internet (UK>Internet) showed a download of 80 Mbts andupload of like 30 Mbts, which indicates a problem with the IPSec tunnel.
Some smaller things we've tried without any positive effect:
routing changes
disabling all security features for affected rule set
removed traffic shaper
Port speed/duplex negotiations are looking good
and some other things that I already forgot
Things we prepared:
We have opened some tickets at our ISPs to let them check it on their site > waiting for response
Set up smokeping to ping all provider/public/gw/ipsec endpoinrts/host IPs and see where packets could be dropped (server located in DE)
Planned a new session with an Fortigate expert to look in-depth into the IPSec configuration.
Need to do:
look through all packet captures (takes some time)
Honestly, that sounds like TCP bandwidth-delay product.
50 ms with a 65k byte RWND is just around 10Mbps.
See for yourself with your numbers: https://wintelguy.com/wanperf.pl
Ping - Update 2
Your numbers are are still missing since I havent had time to look into the pcaps yet. I hope I can get it done by the end of the week, but we are a little bit wiser.
Some VPN solutions downgrade the MSS of all VPNs to the lowest common denominator for things like MTU/MSS. I guess that can make sense in a full-mesh, but whatever.
Take a packet capture of another client while the problem one connects, you'll likely see something.
Decrypted traffic is usually easier to analyze.
Ohhh and you say that's when they connect through SSH? Check that he's not tcp forwarding all traffic through his SSH connection somehow.
Getting a pcap of another client could bring some insight, yeah.
SSH is used for the data transfer. Without knowing it at this moment, I'd assume scp or rsync.
You mean whether all their internet traffic is routed through the active SSH session?
I haven't had the chance to get a pcap yet. As soon as I get my fingers on the test clients, I'll check them and additionally do testing with TCP and UDP transfers. I'll let you know.
Just to clarify: this would be the limit for a single TCP connection and yes, could be the limit for this one download. This would not explain, why the rest of the location is affected if theoretically 90% of the bandwidth is still available, no? - Please correct me if I am wrong here.
This would not explain, why the rest of the location is affected
Yea my bad, I missed the "whole location" bit on first read. This would be the limit for that TCP session.
Still, I'd compare MTU, MSS, RTT packet loss, RWIND, etc. everything that is a component of the actual bandwidth. Whatever happens, some of these things change when he connects.
I've had VPN solutions that downgrade the MTU for everyone when someone with a shit MTU connects to it.
Another thing that came to mind, since you were talking about an SSH connection, is if that user is somehow routing trafic through a tcp forward inside his tunnel when connecting. Stupid test maybe, but I'd compare the before/after TTL of packets in a flow that is known to be affected as well as a traceroute (assuming the client can even run one, because every business seems to like breaking icmp)
Are you sure that the download speed is 10Mbit/s and not 10Mbyte/s which would be close to saturating the 100Mbit/s link and would explain the other symptoms you are seeing?
Have you checked for resent packets or connection resets or similar things that might use up more bandwidth than the successfully received packets? I would probably use Wireguard for that.
Nice job. Packet loss will definitely cause these issues. Now, you just need to find the source of the packet loss.
In your situation, I’d first try to figure out if it is ISP/Internet before looking inside either network. I wouldn’t expect it to be internal at these speeds. Though, did you get CPU/RAM readings on the network equipment during these tests? Maxing out either can result in packet loss.
I’d start with two pairs of packet captures when the issue happened: endpoint to endpoint and edge router to edge router. Figure out if the packet loss is only happening in one direction or not. That is, are all the UK packets reaching DE but not all the DE making it back? You should clearly be able to narrow into a TCP conversation with dropped packets. Dropped packets aren’t ones that a system never sent, they’re ones that a system never received. Find some of those and start figuring out where the drop happened.
The ISPs are slow to answer if there is no active outage. Will take some time anyway.
Packets are dropped in bot directions. I am currently looking through the pcaps and will do another stress test later - got another window. MTU/MSS is the prio today.
If the bandwidth numbers you’ve described are accurate, I’d start looking at CPU and RAM usage on the network device. The Fortigates are going to be doing extra work to handle the VPN. I wouldn’t expect an IPSEC VPN on a Fortigate to top out at 10mbps, but if it’s doing a lot of other work, it’s possible. ACL’s on the Cisco devices? You run the potential of CPU/RAM exhaustion on those. Hopefully, you have remote monitoring on all network devices and you can just look at the history when these transfers are happening.
If nothing obvious there, then I’d try packet captures when this is happening, perhaps to start on the system doing the ssh and on one or two others experiencing issues. What are you seeing? Evidence of dropped packets? High latency? If dropped packets, start capturing the same traffic on the network devices it’s flowing through.
Good points! I'll get access to test clients on both sites to do some testing. If I get the problem reproduced, I can take some packet captures without getting the client involved while monitoring the hardware. I'll be smarter after that session.