Because you have dropped packets.
The queue it’s empty most of the time and if is full for a few milliseconds and that’s the moment when you experience dropped packets.

On Sat, Mar 23, 2024 at 19:23 Sergiu Pojoga via sr-users <sr-users@lists.kamailio.org> wrote:
>  if most of the time the udp queue is empty and dropped packets are observed, then the size of the udp queue is too small.

Hmm.. why would you need to increase the queue size if nothing gets queued up?

On Sat, Mar 23, 2024 at 6:38 PM Alex Balashov via sr-users <sr-users@lists.kamailio.org> wrote:

> On Mar 23, 2024, at 6:05 PM, Ovidiu Sas <osas@voipembedded.com> wrote:
>
> if most of the time the udp queue is empty and dropped packets are observed, then the size of the udp queue is too small.

But would that happen with a sipp load test, once the threshold of dropped requests is observed?

--
Alex Balashov
Principal Consultant
Evariste Systems LLC
Web: https://evaristesys.com
Tel: +1-706-510-6800

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