From: Peter Van Oene (vantech@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Aug 09 1999 - 12:24:10 GMT-3
My knowledge of custom queueing involves the fact that each created
queue is 1500 bytes by default. Hence, if you create 5 queues, 1500 is
20%. From there, you really have to do that match. For example, if you
took those 5 queues all at 1500 as raised one to 6000, you would have
~50% utilization.
Peter Van Oene
Senior Systems Engineer
UNIS LUMIN Inc.
www.unislumin.com
----- Original Message -----
From: Chuah Eng Wee <chuahew@cyberway.com.sg>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Monday, August 09, 1999 2:47 AM
Subject: custom queueing- byte count
> Hi..
>
> I understand that we can use the byte count parameter
> in custom queueing to indirectly specify which protocol
> use more bandwidth.
>
> Caslow's book give a fomula and an example, but it is only for 50%
> utilisation.
>
> For e.g, if I want to have ip traffic occupying 80% of the bandwidth,
> 20% for the rest. How do I calculate the byte count
> to get the desired result ??
>
> Thanks
> Eng Wee
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