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Auteurs principaux: Sundberg, Simon, Brunstrom, Anna, Ferlin-Reiter, Simone, Brouer, Jesper Dangaard, Høiland-Jørgensen, Toke
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2026
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.02057
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author Sundberg, Simon
Brunstrom, Anna
Ferlin-Reiter, Simone
Brouer, Jesper Dangaard
Høiland-Jørgensen, Toke
author_facet Sundberg, Simon
Brunstrom, Anna
Ferlin-Reiter, Simone
Brouer, Jesper Dangaard
Høiland-Jørgensen, Toke
contents With networking moving into the sub-millisecond latency domain, latency in the end host itself can become a significant barrier to achieving consistently low application latency. Both the physical interconnect between the network card and the CPU, the kernel network stack, and the scheduling of applications themselves can be considerable sources of latency. Previous work has studied host latency at various levels, yet there remains a lack of methods and tools to continuously monitor host latency in production. To remedy this, we present netstacklat, a monitoring tool that captures latency at several points in the host network, from the early parts of the Linux kernel network stack all the way until the application reads the data. We evaluate netstacklat in a testbed, demonstrating its ability to capture host latency across 144 variations of HTTP workloads for Nginx and Apache, while also showing how the low monitoring overhead does not inflate tail latency by more than 6%, where previous monitoring solutions increase it by over 100%. Furthermore, we share our initial findings from deploying netstacklat in Cloudflare's global CDN network.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2606_02057
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Waiting at the front door: Continuous monitoring of latency in the host network stack
Sundberg, Simon
Brunstrom, Anna
Ferlin-Reiter, Simone
Brouer, Jesper Dangaard
Høiland-Jørgensen, Toke
Networking and Internet Architecture
With networking moving into the sub-millisecond latency domain, latency in the end host itself can become a significant barrier to achieving consistently low application latency. Both the physical interconnect between the network card and the CPU, the kernel network stack, and the scheduling of applications themselves can be considerable sources of latency. Previous work has studied host latency at various levels, yet there remains a lack of methods and tools to continuously monitor host latency in production. To remedy this, we present netstacklat, a monitoring tool that captures latency at several points in the host network, from the early parts of the Linux kernel network stack all the way until the application reads the data. We evaluate netstacklat in a testbed, demonstrating its ability to capture host latency across 144 variations of HTTP workloads for Nginx and Apache, while also showing how the low monitoring overhead does not inflate tail latency by more than 6%, where previous monitoring solutions increase it by over 100%. Furthermore, we share our initial findings from deploying netstacklat in Cloudflare's global CDN network.
title Waiting at the front door: Continuous monitoring of latency in the host network stack
topic Networking and Internet Architecture
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.02057