Optimize network throughput for Azure virtual machines
Azure Virtual Machines (VMs) have default network settings that can be further optimized for network throughput. This article describes how to optimize network throughput for Microsoft Azure Windows and Linux VMs, including major distributions such as Ubuntu and Red Hat.
Windows virtual machines
If your Windows virtual machine supports accelerated networking, enable that feature for optimal throughput. For more information, see Create a Windows VM with accelerated networking.
For all other Windows virtual machines, using Receive Side Scaling (RSS) can reach higher maximal throughput than a VM without RSS. RSS might be disabled by default in a Windows VM. To determine whether RSS is enabled, and enable it if it's currently disabled, complete the following steps:
See if RSS is enabled for a network adapter with the Get-NetAdapterRss PowerShell command. In the following example output returned from the
Get-NetAdapterRss
, RSS isn't enabled.Name : Ethernet InterfaceDescription : Microsoft Hyper-V Network Adapter Enabled : False
To enable RSS, enter the following command:
Get-NetAdapter | % {Enable-NetAdapterRss -Name $_.Name}
This command doesn't have an output. The command changes NIC settings. It causes temporary connectivity loss for about one minute. A Reconnecting dialog appears during the connectivity loss. Connectivity is typically restored after the third attempt.
Confirm that RSS is enabled in the VM by entering the
Get-NetAdapterRss
command again. If successful, the following example output is returned:Name : Ethernet InterfaceDescription : Microsoft Hyper-V Network Adapter Enabled : True
Linux virtual machines
RSS is always enabled by default in an Azure Linux VM. Linux kernels released since October 2017 include new network optimizations options that enable a Linux VM to achieve higher network throughput.
Ubuntu for new deployments
The Ubuntu Azure kernel is the most optimized for network performance on Azure. Currently all Ubuntu images by Canonical come by default with the optimized Azure kernel installed.
You can simply use the command below to make sure you are using the Azure kernel which is identified by -azure at the end of the version.
uname -r
#sample output on Azure kernel:
6.8.0-1017-azure
Ubuntu Azure kernel upgrade for existing VMs
You can get significant throughput performance by upgrading to the Azure Linux kernel. To verify whether you have this kernel, check your kernel version. It should be the same or later than the example.
#Azure kernel name ends with "-azure"
uname -r
#sample output on Azure kernel:
#4.13.0-1007-azure
If your virtual machine doesn't have the Azure kernel, the version number usually begins with "4.4." If the VM doesn't have the Azure kernel, run the following commands as root:
#run as root or preface with sudo
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade -y
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade -y
sudo apt-get install "linux-azure"
sudo reboot
Other distributions
Most modern distributions should have significant improvements with kernels newer than 4.19+, you can check the current kernel version and make sure you are running a newer kernel.
Next steps
- Deploy VMs close to each other for low latency with proximity placement groups.
- See the optimized result with Bandwidth/Throughput testing for your scenario.
- Read about how bandwidth is allocated to virtual machines.
- Learn more with Azure Virtual Network frequently asked questions.