Compute Engine lets you select a high-bandwidth per VM Tier_1 networking performance configuration for certain general-purpose and compute-optimized virtual machine (VM) instances. VMs with Tier_1 networking configurations are especially useful for large, distributed compute workloads with lots of heavy internode communications, such as high performance computing (HPC), machine learning (ML), and deep learning (DL).
Combining these high throughput VMs with high-performance local SSD storage is beneficial for I/O-intensive, flash-optimized databases.
Before you begin
- Review the pricing for per VM Tier_1 networking performance at Tier_1 higher bandwidth network pricing.
-
If you haven't already, then set up authentication.
Authentication is
the process by which your identity is verified for access to Google Cloud services and APIs.
To run code or samples from a local development environment, you can authenticate to
Compute Engine by selecting one of the following options:
Select the tab for how you plan to use the samples on this page:
Console
When you use the Google Cloud console to access Google Cloud services and APIs, you don't need to set up authentication.
gcloud
-
Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:
gcloud init
- Set a default region and zone.
REST
To use the REST API samples on this page in a local development environment, you use the credentials you provide to the gcloud CLI.
Install the Google Cloud CLI, then initialize it by running the following command:
gcloud init
For more information, see Authenticate for using REST in the Google Cloud authentication documentation.
-
Required roles
To get the permissions that you need to configure a VM to use per VM Tier_1 networking performance, ask your administrator to grant you the following IAM roles on your project:
-
Compute Instance Admin (v1) (
roles/compute.instanceAdmin.v1
) -
Create Service Accounts (
roles/iam.serviceAccountCreator
)
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
These predefined roles contain the permissions required to configure a VM to use per VM Tier_1 networking performance. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:
Required permissions
The following permissions are required to configure a VM to use per VM Tier_1 networking performance:
-
To create VMs:
compute.instances.create
on the project- To use a custom image to create the VM:
compute.images.useReadOnly
on the image - To use a snapshot to create the VM:
compute.snapshots.useReadOnly
on the snapshot - To use an instance template to create the VM:
compute.instanceTemplates.useReadOnly
on the instance template - To assign a legacy network to the VM:
compute.networks.use
on the project - To specify a static IP address for the VM:
compute.addresses.use
on the project - To assign an external IP address to the VM when using a legacy network:
compute.networks.useExternalIp
on the project - To specify a subnet for the VM:
compute.subnetworks.use
on the project or on the chosen subnet - To assign an external IP address to the VM when using a VPC network:
compute.subnetworks.useExternalIp
on the project or on the chosen subnet - To set VM instance metadata for the VM:
compute.instances.setMetadata
on the project - To set tags for the VM:
compute.instances.setTags
on the VM - To set labels for the VM:
compute.instances.setLabels
on the VM - To set a service account for the VM to use:
compute.instances.setServiceAccount
on the VM - To create a new disk for the VM:
compute.disks.create
on the project - To attach an existing disk in read-only or read-write mode:
compute.disks.use
on the disk - To attach an existing disk in read-only mode:
compute.disks.useReadOnly
on the disk
-
To update a VM to include Tier_1 networking:
-
compute.instances.update
-
Permission to use the resources that you want to modify on the instance, forexample
compute.instances.updateNetworkInterface
-
-
To create an instance template with Tier_1 networking:
All thepermissions required to call the
instanceTemplates.insert
method
You might also be able to get these permissions with custom roles or other predefined roles.
Limitations
- Compute Engine is the only product area supporting Tier_1 networking.
- Tier_1 networking is supported with N2, N2D, C2, C2D, C3, C3D, C4, C4A, M3, and Z3 machine types that have the minimum required vCPUs.
- For VMs, Tier_1 networking requires the gVNIC virtual network driver and a gVNIC-compatible OS or custom image.
- Third generation and later VMs require gVNIC driver version 1.3 or later to deliver the highest network bandwidth. Make sure the operating system (OS) image that you use fully supports Tier_1 networking. Fully supported OS images include the updated gVNIC driver. You can update the gVNIC driver on images that don't have the latest version.
- Purchasable stock keeping units (SKUs) for Tier_1 networking are excluded from committed use discounts.
- Large C4, C3, C3D, and Z3 VMs might encounter NUMA-related bottlenecks when bandwidth is pushed beyond 100 Gbps. Depending on your application architecture, you might need to control for thread and interrupt placement. On Linux, guest OS features such as Receive Flow Steering (RFS) can help address this issue. Ensure that your applications are NUMA-tuned to maximize your performance.
- On Windows VMs, the gVNIC driver provides up to 50 Gbps of network bandwidth, for both the default network and Tier_1 networking. However, on third generation and later instances that support up to 200 Gbps network bandwidth, you can use an updated version of the gVNIC driver to achieve close to line-rate performance. For more information, see Update to the latest gVNIC driver for Windows.
Bandwidth tiers
The egress bandwidth limit represents the maximum possible amount of data per unit of time (for example, gigabits per second, or Gbps) that Google Cloud allows a VM to emit from its network interfaces (NICs). The egress bandwidth includes data transferred to all Persistent Disk and Google Cloud Hyperdisk volumes attached to the VM.
Note the following about bandwidth limits:
- The default bandwidth limit ranges from 10 Gbps to 200 Gbps, depending on the machine type and VM size.
- Tier_1 networking increases the maximum egress bandwidth limit for VMs. The maximum egress bandwidth limit ranges from 50 Gbps to 200 Gbps, depending on the size and machine type of your VM.
- The actual egress bandwidth is always less than or equal to the egress bandwidth limit.
To achieve the highest possible egress bandwidth, all of the following must be true:
- The sending and receiving VMs must be in the same zone.
- The VMs must have NICs in the same VPC network or in VPC networks connected by VPC Network Peering.
- Packets sent between the VMs must use internal IP address destinations.
- The VPC network used by the VMs uses the highest maximum transmission unit (MTU) setting. A higher MTU reduces the packet-header overhead and thus increases payload data throughput.
For a complete discussion about egress and ingress bandwidth limits, see Network bandwidth.
General-purpose C4A VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for C4A VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
2 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
4 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32 | 23 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
48 | 34 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
64 | 45 Gbps | 75 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
72 | 50 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose C4 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for C4 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
4 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
48 | 34 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
96 | 67 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
192 | 100 Gbps | 200 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose C3 VMs and bare metal instances
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for C3 VMs and bare metal instances.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
22 | 23 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
44 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
88 | 62 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
176 | 100 Gbps | 200 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
192 | 100 Gbps | 200 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose C3D VMs
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | 20 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 20 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 20 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
30 | 20 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
60 | 40 Gbps | 75 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
90 | 60 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
180 | 100 Gbps | 150 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
360 | 100 Gbps | 200 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
Compute-optimized C2 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for C2 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
30 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 7 Gbps |
60 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 7 Gbps |
Compute-optimized C2D VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for C2D VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
4 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
56 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
112 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
Compute-optimized H3 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for H3 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | External IP |
---|---|---|
88 | 200 Gbps | 1 Gbps |
Memory-optimized M3 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for M3 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
32 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
64 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
128 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose N2 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for N2 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
4 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
48 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
64 | 32 Gbps | 75 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
80 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
96 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
128 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose N2 (custom size shapes) VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for custom-sized N2 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2, 4, or 6 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8, 10, 12, or 14 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, or 30 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32, 36, 40, 44, 48, 52, 56, or 60 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
64, 68, 72, or 76 | 32 Gbps | 75 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
80 or more | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose N2D VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for N2D VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
4 | 10 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
32 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
48 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
64 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
80 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
96 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
128 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
224 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
General-purpose N2D (custom size shapes) VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for custom-sized N2D VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 or 4 | 10 Gbps | Not applicable (N/A) | 7 Gbps | N/A |
8 | 16 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
16 or 32 | 32 Gbps | N/A | 7 Gbps | N/A |
48, 64, or 80 | 32 Gbps | 50 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
96 | 32 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
Memory-optimized X4 instance
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for X4 bare metal instances.
vCPUs | Internal IP | External IP |
---|---|---|
960 | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps |
1440 | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps |
1920 | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps |
Storage-optimized Z3 VMs
The following table describes the egress bandwidth limits for Z3 VMs.
vCPUs | Internal IP | Tier_1 Internal IP | External IP | Tier_1 External IP |
---|---|---|---|---|
88 | 62 Gbps | 100 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
176 | 100 Gbps | 200 Gbps | 7 Gbps | 25 Gbps |
Configure an instance with Tier_1 networking
You can enable Tier_1 networking when creating a compute instance if the instance doesn't use the VirtioNet interface. You can also edit an instance to add or remove Tier_1 networking, provided the instance was created with the gVNIC or IDPF network interface .
Optionally, you can also enable faster network packet processing with DPDK to run performance-intensive applications on a VM that uses Tier_1 networking.
Create instances and containers that use Tier_1 networking
Use the Google Cloud console, the Google Cloud CLI or REST to add Tier_1 networking to a new compute instance or container.
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the VM instances page.
Select your project.
Click Create instance.
Specify a Name for your compute instance. For more information, see Resource naming convention.
Select a region and zone that supports the machine type you plan to use.
Select a Machine configuration for your instance. To create an instance with Tier_1 networking, you must select a N2, N2D, C2, C2D, C3, C3D, C4, C4A, M3, or Z3 VM.
- Click the General purpose tab before selecting N2, N2D, C4, C4A, C3, or C3D from the Series drop-down menu.
- Click the Compute optimized tab before selecting C2 or C2D from the Series menu.
- Click the Memory optimized tab before selecting M3 from the Series menu.
- Click the Storage optimized tab before selecting Z3 from the Series menu.
If you get an error that the machine type is not available in the selected region, change the region to one that supports your chosen machine type.
In the Machine type menu, choose a machine type that aligns with the bandwidth tier size requirements.
To select a compatible operating system, in the Boot disk section, click Change, and then select a supported operating system or use the Custom Images tab to select a custom image.
Optional. In the Firewall section, choose your firewall rules.
Expand the Advanced options section.
Expand the Networking section, and then do the following:
In the Network interface card menu, select gVNIC.
In the Network bandwidth section, select the Enable per VM Tier_1 networking performance checkbox.
If your VM has multiple NICs or your instance uses IPv6 addresses, configure your Network interfaces.
Click Create.
gcloud
Use the gcloud compute instances create command
to create a VM with a gVNIC virtual network driver.
Use the --network-performance-configs
flag and the
--network-interface
flag to configure a network performance setting
for a VM. If you don't specify these flags the VM is created with the
default network performance configuration.
To create a VM running container images, use the gcloud compute instances create-with-container command.
gcloud compute instances create VM_NAME \ --image=OS_IMAGE \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --network-performance-configs=total-egress-bandwidth-tier=TIER_1 \ --network-interface=nic-type=GVNIC
Replace the following:
- VM_NAME: the name of the VM
- OS_IMAGE: an image that supports gVNIC image
- MACHINE_TYPE: a machine type that supports a high-bandwidth configuration
For example:
gcloud compute instances create instance-1 \ --network-performance-configs=total-egress-bandwidth-tier=TIER_1 \ --network-interface=nic-type=GVNIC \ --image-family=rocky-linux-8-optimized-gcp \ --image-project=rocky-linux-cloud \ --machine-type=n2-standard-32
REST
Call the Compute Engine API instances.insert method to create a VM with a high-bandwidth network configuration. Within the request body:
- Set the
networkPerformanceConfig
parameters tototalEgressBandwidthTier
andTIER_1
. - Set the
networkInterface
parameters tonicType
andGVNIC
.
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/instances { "name": VM_NAME, "description": string, ... "networkPerformanceConfig": { "totalEgressBandwidthTier": TIER_1 }, "networkInterfaces": [ { "nicType": "GVNIC" }, ... ] }
Replace the following:
- PROJECT_ID: your project ID
- ZONE: the zone where you want to create the VM
- VM_NAME: the name of the VM
Update a VM to include Tier_1 networking
Refer to the Updating instance properties documentation to ensure you are meeting all the requirements to successfully update your VM. Use the Google Cloud console, the Google Cloud CLI or REST to update a VM.
You can modify an existing VM to change the network configuration to include or exclude per VM Tier_1 networking performance. Your VM must already have a gVNIC interface associated with it; you can't edit your VM to add a network interface. To update the network configuration, you must stop and restart the VM.
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the VM instances page.
Select your project.
Click the name of the VM that you want to modify.
Stop the VM.
Select Edit.
If your VM was originally configured with a gVNIC card, select the Enable per VM Tier_1 networking performance checkbox to add per VM Tier_1 networking performance, or deselect the checkbox to remove this feature from your VM.
Save your changes.
Restart your VM.
gcloud
Export your VM's information to a YAML file using the
gcloud compute instances export
command.gcloud compute instances export VM_NAME \ --zone=ZONE --destination=PATH_TO_FILE
Replace the following:
- VM_NAME: the name of the VM
- ZONE: the name of the zone where the VM is located
-
PATH_TO_FILE: a filename with a
.yaml
extension.For example:
gcloud compute instances export instance-1 \ --zone=europe-west1-c --destination=test-file.yaml
Open the Cloud Shell Editor, or the editor of your choice.
Open the YAML file you created.
Locate the configuration section for
networkPerformanceConfig
in the file. Change the setting fortotalEgressBandwidthTier
as shown in the following example:networkPerformanceConfig: totalEgressBandwidthTier: TIER_1
Setting
totalEgressBandwidthTier
toTIER_1
adds Tier_1 networking. Setting it toDEFAULT
removes the configuration.Use the
gcloud compute instance update-from-file
command to update the VM with the changes in the file.gcloud compute instances update-from-file VM_NAME \ --zone=ZONE \ --source=PATH_TO_FILE \ --most-disruptive-allowed-action=RESTART
Replace the following:
- VM_NAME: the name of the VM
- ZONE: the name of the zone where the VM is located
- PATH_TO_FILE: your
.yaml
filename
The
--most-disruptive-allowed-action=RESTART
flag setting automatically restarts your VM with the updated configuration.
REST
Call the instances.update method to modify the network configuration.
PUT https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/instances/RESOURCE_ID?most_disruptive_allowed_action=RESTART { "networkPerformanceConfig":{ "totalEgressBandwidthTier": "TIER_1" }, ... }
Setting totalEgressBandwidthTier
to TIER_1
adds
Tier_1 networking. Setting it to DEFAULT
removes the configuration.
Replace the following:
- PROJECT_ID: your project ID
- ZONE: the zone where your VM resides
- RESOURCE_ID: the name of your VM
The most_disruptive_allowed_action=RESTART
query parameter
automatically restarts your VM with the updated configuration.
Verify high-bandwidth configuration in a VM
Use the Google Cloud console, the Google Cloud CLI or REST to generate a description of an existing VM or an existing VM running container images to verify the VM's bandwidth tier.
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the VM instances page.
Select your project and click Continue.
Click the VM name to see its configuration details and see if the VM uses per VM Tier_1 networking performance.
gcloud
Use the
gcloud compute instances describe
command
to check if your VM uses per VM Tier_1 networking performance.
For example:
gcloud compute instances describe VM_NAME \ --format="text(name, networkPerformanceConfig)"
The output is similar to the following:
name: instance-1 networkPerformanceConfig.totalEgressBandwidthTier:TIER_1
If the output shows the value DEFAULT
, then Tier_1 networking
isn't enabled.
REST
Call the Compute Engine API
instances.get
method
to view the network configuration.
GET https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/ZONE/instances/RESOURCE_ID/
Replace the following:
- PROJECT_ID: your project name
- ZONE: the zone where your VM resides
- RESOURCE_ID: the name of your VM
The output should contain the following lines:
{ "name": RESOURCE_ID, "description": string, ... "networkPerformanceConfig": { "totalEgressBandwidthTier": "TIER_1" }, ... }
If the output shows the value DEFAULT
, then Tier_1 networking is not
enabled.
Create an instance template with Tier_1 networking
Use the Google Cloud console, the Google Cloud CLI or REST to create an instance template with per VM Tier_1 networking performance. Refer to the Creating an instance template documentation to ensure you are meeting all the requirements to create your VM instance template.
Console
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Instance templates page.
Click Create instance template.
Enter values for the following fields, or accept the default values.
Specify a Name for your instance template. For more information, see Resource naming convention.
Select a region and zone that supports Tier_1 networking.
Select a Machine configuration for your VM. To create a VM with Tier_1 networking, you must select an N2, N2D, C4, C4A, C3, C3D, C2, C2D, or Z3 VM.
- Click the General purpose tab before selecting N2, N2D, C4, C4A, C3, or C3D from the Series drop-down menu.
- Click the Compute optimized tab before selecting C2 or C2D from the Series menu.
- Click the Storage optimized tab before selecting Z3 from the Series menu.
In the Machine type menu, choose a machine type that aligns with the bandwidth tier size requirements.
In the Boot disk section, click Change, and then select a gVNIC-compatible or custom image.
Optional. In the Firewall section, choose your firewall rules.
Expand the Advanced options section.
Expand the Networking section, and then do the following:
In the Network interface card menu, select gVNIC.
In the Network bandwidth section, select the Enable per VM Tier_1 networking performance checkbox.
If your VM has multiple NICs or you use IPv6 addresses, configure your Network interfaces.
Click Create.
gcloud
Use the gcloud compute instance-templates create
command
with both the --network-performance-configs
and the --network-interface
flags.
gcloud compute instance-templates create INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME \ --image=OS_IMAGE \ --machine-type=MACHINE_TYPE \ --network-performance-configs=total-egress-bandwidth-tier=TIER_1 \ --network-interface=nic-type=GVNIC
Replace the following:
- INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME: the name of your instance template
- OS_IMAGE: an operating system image that supports gVNIC
- MACHINE_TYPE: a machine type that supports Tier_1 networking, as described in Bandwidth tiers.
For example:
gcloud compute instance-templates create instance-template-1 \ --image-family=rocky-linux-8-optimized-gcp \ --image-project=rocky-linux-cloud \ --network-performance-configs=total-egress-bandwidth-tier=TIER_1 \ --machine-type=n2-standard-32 \ --network-interface=nic-type=GVNIC
REST
Call the Compute Engine API
instanceTemplates.insert
method.
Within the request body, set the networkPerformanceConfig
parameter
to totalEgressBandwidthTier
and TIER_1
. Set the networkInterfaces
parameter to nicType
and GVNIC
.
POST https://compute.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/instancesTemplates { "name": "INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME", "properties": { "machineType": "zones/ZONE/machineTypes/MACHINE_TYPE", ... "networkPerformanceConfig": { "totalEgressBandwidthTier": "TIER_1" }, "networkInterfaces": [ { "nicType": "GVNIC" }, ... }
Replace the following:
- PROJECT_ID: your project name
- INSTANCE_TEMPLATE_NAME: your instance template name
- ZONE: the zone where your VM is located
- MACHINE_TYPE: the machine type of the VM
- RESOURCE_ID: the name of your VM
Benchmark a higher bandwidth configuration
You can run a benchmark test to check your VM's performance with per VM Tier_1 networking performance. Be sure to remove the benchmarking resources you created during testing to avoid unexpected resource charges.