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@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ after one warmup round. MRT data is decompressed upfront, to avoid accounting fo
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decompression overhead, the output is sent directly to `/dev/null`,
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to avoid any disk write overhead.
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## The show's on
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## Let the fun begin!
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We take the data for the first benchmark from
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RouteViews' [Sydney Route Collector](http://archive.routeviews.org/route-views.sydney/bgpdata),
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and pull the very first RIB of December 2020, along with any subsequent updates from the same month.
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@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ bgpdump -mv sydney/2020-12/uncompressed.mrt >/dev/null
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`bgpgrep` is 11% faster than `bgpscanner`, which is good.
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Since this benchmark operates mostly on MRT update dumps, let's try the same
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on a different dataset, mostly made of RIBs.
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We pull nine RIBs from RIPE RIS NCC [RRC00 Route Collector]](https://data.ris.ripe.net/rrc00/2019.12/),
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We pull nine RIBs from RIPE RIS NCC [RRC00 Route Collector](https://data.ris.ripe.net/rrc00/2019.12/),
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and obtain 25.7GB worth of uncompressed MRT data.
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This time the benchmark is limited to `bgpgrep` and `bgpscanner`.
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