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Home/ Questions/Q 73769
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:15:12+00:00 2026-05-10T20:15:12+00:00

It’s a tricky question I was asked the other day… We’re working on a

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It’s a tricky question I was asked the other day… We’re working on a pretty complex telephony (SIP) application with mixed C++ and PHP code with MySQL databases and several open source components.

A telecom engineer asked us to estimate the performance of the application (which is not ready yet). He went like ‘well, you know how many packets can pass through the Linux kernel per second, plus you might know how quick your app is, so tell me how many calls will pass through your stuff per second’.

Seems nonsense to me, as there are a million scenarios that might happen (well, literally…)

However… is there a way to estimate application performance (knowing the hardware it will run on, being able to run standard benchmarks on it, etc) before actual testing?

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:15:13+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:15 pm

    You certainly can bound the problem with upper (max throughput) limits. There is nothing nonsense about that. In fact, not knowing that stuff indicates a pretty haphazard approach to a problem – especially in the telephony world.

    You can work through the problem yourself – what is the minimum ‘work’ you have to accomplish for a transaction or whatever unit of task you have in your app?

    Some messages to and from, some processing and a database hit for example? Getting information on the individual pieces will give you an idea of the fastest possible throughput. If you load up the system and see significantly lower performance then you can take time to figure out where you are possibly losing throughput with inefficient algorithms, etc.

    EDIT

    To do this exercise you need to know all the steps your app does for each use case. Then you can identify the max throughput for each use case. You should definitely know this stuff prior to release and going live.

    I’m ignoring the worst case analysis as that – as you point out – is quite a bit harder.

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